A GREEK SILVER PLATE
A GREEK SILVER PLATE

SELEUCID, HELLENISTIC PERIOD, CIRCA 3RD-1ST CENTURY B.C.

Details
A GREEK SILVER PLATE
SELEUCID, HELLENISTIC PERIOD, CIRCA 3RD-1ST CENTURY B.C.
Of shallow slightly concave form, the underside cast with sixty-two radiating ribs, each incised around the perimeter, their tips undercut
13 3/8 in. (34 cm.) diam.
82 oz. (2583 gr.)
Provenance
D . Atanasov collection, Munich, 1950-1960.
T. Arakji collection, Hamburg, 1990.
with Galerie Blondeel-Deroyan, Paris, late 1990s.
Private collection, Europe.

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Lot Essay

The wealth of the Seleucid Empire led to extravagant tastes, and heavy silver vessels such as this one were fashionable among society's elite. This plate is unusually heavy and roughly corresponds to a multiple of standard weights of the time. 82 troy ounces is roughly equivalent to between 450-470 Persian sigloi, which ranged in weight from 5.45, 5.55 and 5.69 grams. Comparatively little Seleucid silver survives today since during periods of political instability, much of the existing silver was melted down for basic coinage, making this large and impressive plate a rare survival from antiquity.

For a pair of Seleucid bowls with similar fluted decoration, cf. M. True et al., A Passion for Antiquities: Ancient Art from the Collection of Barbara and Lawrence Fleischman, Malibu, 1994, pp. 227-228, nos 115 A.-B. For plate as coinage, see, M. Vickers, 'Persian gold in the Parthenon inventories', Revue des Etudes Anciennes, 91 (2), 1989, pp. 249-257.

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