-40%

Herod the Great Bronze Prutah in a Clear Box

$ 25.33

Availability: 50 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    Herod the Great Bronze Prutah in a Clear Box
    A two-thousand-year-old coin issued in the Holy Land by the infamous Herod I.
    Herod I
    is one of the Bible’s most complex figures. A brilliant politician and the greatest builder in Jewish history, he was also a paranoid madman who ruthlessly executed anyone he deemed a threat to his absolute power, whether legitimate rivals, family members, or innocent babies. Crowned King of the Jews by the Roman Senate, Herod ruled from 40 BC until his disease-ridden death 36 years later. A prodigious builder, Herod expanded the Second Temple in Jerusalem, of which only the famed Western Wall remains.
    When Herod was in his 70s, he was visited by “wise men from the East” who came in search of the Messiah—the King of the Jews. Fearful of a coup, Herod divined from his priests that this Messiah would be born in Bethlehem, as prophesized in Micah 5:2. As a precautionary measure, he ordered the so-called “Massacre of the Innocents,” in which all male children in the Bethlehem area under the age of two were put to death. This was both brutal and unsuccessful, as Mary and Joseph secreted the infant Jesus to Egypt for safety, only returning after Herod’s death.
    Modern historians are divided on what illness claimed Herod’s life. Some suggest chronic kidney disease and Fournier’s gangrene, others scabies. What we do know is that king suffered horribly. Colloquially, the malady that killed him is known as Herod’s Evil.
    Several types of bronze prutah coins were minted in Herod's name. They were all crudely minted in small quantities. Most coins show only partial images of the original design elements. Herod made an effort to portray pagan Roman and Greek themes while at the same time satisfying local traditions. His designs all avoided images of animate objects, thus obeying the second commandment forbidding graven images. This coin is the most common design, showing a double cornucopia and a central caduceus on one side and an anchor on the other. It is different from the earlier Hasmonean dynasty designs. Absent is the paleo-Hebrew inscription, replaced by Greek. Also, the earlier designs showing a pomegranate located between the cornucopias were replaced on Herod's coins by a caduceus—a pagan symbol of prosperity.
    Bronze prutah of Herod I the Great
    W: 1.2-1.9 g; D: 12-13.5 mm
    Obverse: Anchor
    Reverse: Cornucopia
    Order code:
    HEROD-CLRBOX
    Box measures: 4 5/ 8" x 3 1/ 2" x 1/ 2"
    All coins in each set are protected in an archival capsule and beautifully displayed in a clear box. The box set is accom panied w ith a story card and certificate of authenticity.
    Free Shipping for U.S. Customers!!!!
    Pictures sell!
    Auctiva Free Image Hosting.
    Show off your items with
    Auctiva's Listing Templates
    Auctiva,
    THE simple solution for eBay sellers.