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Seleucid Kings, (114/3-95 BC)
Æ (bronze) (18 mm, 5.73 g, orientation 11 h)
Antioch on the Orontes, year 203 (110/9 BC)
Obverse: Laureate head of Heracles facing right.
Reverso: Athena Nikephoros (victory-bringer) standing to the left; to the outer left, monogram with a wheat stalk above.
References: SC 2368.1b; HGC 9, 1250.
Conservation status: VF - Good VF (Very Fine - Very Well Preserved).
Additional explanation: Antiochus IX
Antiochus IX He was one of the kings of the Seleucid dynasty who ruled during times of internal conflict and dynastic struggles in the late Hellenistic period.
The coin was minted in Antioch on the Orontes, one of the main cities of the Seleucid kingdom.
The laurel-crowned head of Hercules (Heracles) symbolizes strength and heroism.
Athena Nikephoros on the reverse depicts the goddess Athena as the bringer of victory, a common image to reflect military power and divine protection.
The monogram and the wheat stalk on the reverse likely identify the mint or minting authority and may reflect the importance of agriculture or symbolic fertility.