The Cleveland Museum of Art

Collection Online as of May 13, 2025

Octodrachm: Head of Arsinoe II (obverse); Double Cornucopia (reverse)

205–145 BCE
Location: not on view

Did You Know?

The small horn around Arsinoe’s ear, referencing the Egyptian god Amon-Re, marks her divine status.

Description

On this long-lived series of coinage, Arsinoe II, a divinized Hellenistic queen, wears the crown and veil associated with Hera; a scepter may be just visible beside her neck. The daughter of Ptolemy I, founder of the Hellenistic Greek dynasty that ruled Egypt for nearly three centuries, Arsinoe married Lysimachos, king of Thrace, at the age of fifteen. After his death, she married first her half-brother and then her full brother, Ptolemy II, beginning a long-lasting Ptolemaic dynastic tradition of sibling marriage. Twin cornucopias on the reverse of this coin likely refer to the divine ruling couple, presaged in Egypt by Isis and Osiris, and in Greece by Zeus and Hera.
  • Mrs. R. Henry Norweb
    Formerly in the collection of Mrs. R. Henry Norweb
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    Berman, Lawrence M., and Kenneth J. Bohač. Catalogue of Egyptian Art: The Cleveland Museum of Art. Cleveland, OH: Cleveland Museum of Art, 1999. Reproduced: p.459; Mentioned: p. 459-60, cat. no. 354
  • {{cite web|title=Octodrachm: Head of Arsinoe II (obverse); Double Cornucopia (reverse)|url=false|author=|year=205–145 BCE|access-date=13 May 2025|publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art}}

Source URL:

https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1965.552