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P. 111. History of the Civilization and Arts of Armenia from the Bronze Age to Present. By Maximillien de Lafayette. The Globe Weekly News

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THE BEAUTY OF THE ARMENIAN COINAGE ART

  By Maximillien  de Lafayette

   

          

                                   CILICIA COINAGE              COIN OF HETUM I, circa 1226-1270        CILICIA COINAGE

 

The beauty of the ancient Armenian coins rivaled its Greek and Roman counterparts. Under Tigran the Great, Armenian coinage minted in silver and copper  was more refined in design and execution than the Greek and Roman coinages.

Photos: Armenian coinage from the 3rd century.

FIRST ARMENIAN COINS

first Armenian coins minted in bronze were issued by the Armenian kings of Sophene. They  appeared for the first time in ancient Armenia during the 3rd century B.C. They included series of coins depicting on one side, Armenian kings such as Abdissares, Charaspes, Xerxes and Arsames and on the other side, they had Greek signs or symbols and  characters representing a variety of animals and  birds pertaining to Greek cults and mythology. The Armenians adopted this new monetary system from the Greeks who invented the “metal currency” in the 7th century B.C. century. This explains the reasons for having Greek symbols and characters on one side of the Armenian coins. In addition, the Greek coins were considered and used as “monetary standards” for centuries in Asia Minor and Armenia. The Greek “ coin monetary system” was used as monetary value standard(s) in goods and money exchanges in Asia Minor, Middle East, Near East, Africa, part of Europe, and of course in all the lands and territories of the Greek empire which included Armenia. At that time, under the Greek rule, Armenians traded with “Alexander the Macedonian” gold coins . They referred to these Greek coins as “Sater”. Greek coins were later replaced by Armenian coins following the collapse of the Macedonian empire in that part of the world.  And this, will take us back to the 3rd century and Armenian reign of  the kings  of Sophene. Archaeological excavations in the Erebuni and Sisian unveiled Greek silver coins from the 5th and  6th centuries B.C. which were the “main currency” used in buying, selling and trading in Armenia and the countries of Asia Minor under the Greek empire. Later, in the 2nd century B.C. during the Artaxiad dynasty, Armenian coins became minted  in copper, bronze and silver as well. Armenian coinage reached its highest level of perfection during the reign of Tigran the Great (95-55 B.C.) and continued throughout the epoch of the kingdom of Cilicia for nearly three hundred years (from1,080 to 1,375). Tigran the Great is considered as the godfather of Armenian coinage. The most varied and abundant sets and varieties of coins ever minted  (in Armenia and Occupied Syria) occurred during his reign and later during the reign of his successor Artavazd the second. From the beginning of the reign of  Roupen  till the end of the reign of  Levon the fifth, a varied collection of  copper, silver and gold  coinage was minted in multiple denominations ranging from Tanks, Kardez, Poghs, double Trams, half trams to Takvorins.

 

 

 

P. 112. History of the Civilization and Arts of Armenia from the Bronze Age to Present. By Maximillien de Lafayette. The Globe Weekly News 

 

FROM THE FALL OF THE ARTASHESIAN DYNASTY TO THE FIRST ARMENIAN REPUBLIC


After the fall of the Artashesian dynasty, Armenian coins minting came to a halt for centuries to come.
The 11th century was bad news for the Armenians. Atrocity and  massacres were committed by the Turks against the Armenian population. Many fled the homeland, while thousands were either deported, exiled or massacred. A considerable number of Armenians settled on the plateau of Cilicia, soon to become a formidable kingdom. Indeed, at the dawn of the 12th century, Cilicia  kingdom was created and began to make its mark on history. It did not take the Armenians long before a new currency came to life. The first coinage mint occurred under the reign of the very first king of Cilicia, king Levon the first and remained in circulation for approximately three hundred years. The very first minted coins symbolized the strong Armenian Christian faith, for they represented Christian signs and symbols. In addition to a great national pride in their ethnic origin, Armenians first, display an enormous Christian fervor and a deep faith in Jesus Christ. They did manifest this fervor and faith in minting their coins. Almost all the minted metal currency at that time depicted a monarch and a dominant Christian symbol.

The very first series of coins were minted in silver and bronze with a very limited edition in gold which was not widely used or circulated among the population. By the end of the reign of Levon the fifth, (from 1, 374 to 1,375)  the last king of Cilicia, all Armenian coins were minted in nickel or copper. In the 13th and 14th centuries, the Rupenid dynasty and the Hetumit dynasty issued a series of magnificently minted coins depicting various secular and religious symbols, in addition to a most unique novelty: Minted coins with Armenian and Arabic characters!!  This was the last time, Armenia will and would issue or mint a currency until the arrival of the first Armenian republic in 1,918.

Photos: Cilician coins.

 

  

                                                           Hetumian Coinage, 13th century                                                  Parthian Coinage

 

 

 P. 113. History of the Civilization and Arts of Armenia from the Bronze Age to Present. By Maximillien de Lafayette. The Globe Weekly News

 

CLASSIFICATION OF ARMENIAN COINAGE PER DYNASTY AND KINGS REIGNS

Tigran I
Tigran II
Artavazd II
Artashes II
Tigran III
Tigran IV
Artavazd III
Tigran IV and Queen Erato
Artavazd IV
Tigran V

bronze coins
bronze  and silver coins
bronze and silver coins
bronze coins
bronze and silver coins
bronze coins
bronze coins
bronze coins
bronze and silver coins
bronze coins

     

 

 

 

 

                                                                  1.                                                               2.

Photos from L to R: #2 . King Levon I, Silver, 1,198-1,219 .  #2..King Levon II, Silver, Erevan, 1,270-1,289

 

      

                          1.                                                     2.                                                  3.

Photos from L to R" #1-King Levon I, Copper 1198-1219     #2-King Artashés II, Copper, 30-20 B.C.   #3-King Kiwriké of Lori, Bronze, 11th century

 

 

 P. 114. History of the Civilization and Arts of Armenia from the Bronze Age to Present. By Maximillien de Lafayette. The Globe Weekly News

 

 

   

                       CILICIA COINAGE                                                         PARTHIAN COIN

 

     

                                TIGRAN COINAGE                    ORONTES COINAGE                    TIGRAN COINAGE

 

 

  

                                                                         Hetumian Coinage, 13th century

 

 

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