-40%

UNC Silver Double-headed eagle 🔷 Greece 30 Drachmai 1964 🔷 Grece Griechenland

$ 9.96

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Year: 1964
  • Denomination: 30 Drachmai
  • Composition: Silver
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Greece
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Certification: Uncertified

    Description

    The item on the pictures is the one that you will receive. Look carrefully and judge for your self for the quallity and the grade.
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    In
    heraldry
    and
    vexillology
    , the
    double-headed eagle
    (or
    double-eagle
    ) is a
    charge
    associated with the concept of
    Empire
    . Most modern uses of the symbol are directly or indirectly associated with its use by the
    Byzantine Empire
    , whose use of it represented the Empire's dominion over the Near East and the West. The symbol is much older, and its original meaning is debated among scholars. The
    eagle
    has long been a symbol of power and dominion.
    The double-headed eagle or double-eagle is a
    motif
    that appears in
    Mycenaean Greece
    and in the
    Ancient Near East
    , especially in
    Hittite iconography
    . It re-appeared during the
    High Middle Ages
    , from around the 10th or 11th centuries, and was notably used by the
    Byzantine Empire
    , but 11th or 12th century representations have also been found originating from
    Islamic Spain
    ,
    France
    and the Serbian principality of
    Raška
    . From the 13th century onward, it became even more widespread, and was used by the
    Seljuk Sultanate of Rum
    and the
    Mamluk Sultanate
    within the Islamic world, and within the Christian world by the
    Holy Roman Empire
    ,
    Serbia
    , several medieval
    Albanian noble families
    and
    Russia
    .
    Used in the
    Byzantine Empire
    as a dynastic emblem of the
    Palaiologoi
    , it was adopted during the Late Medieval to
    Early Modern period
    in the
    Holy Roman Empire
    on the one hand, and in
    Orthodox
    principalities (
    Serbia
    and
    Russia
    ) on the other, representing an
    augmentation
    of the (single-headed)
    eagle
    or
    Aquila
    associated with the
    Roman Empire
    . In a few places, among them the Holy Roman Empire and Russia, the motif was further augmented to create the less prominent
    triple-headed eagle
    .
    Mycenaean Greece
    In
    Mycenaean Greece
    , evidence of the double-eagle motif was discovered in
    Grave Circle A
    , an elite Mycenaean cemetery; the motif was part of a series of gold jewelry, possibly a necklace with a repeating design.
    [4]
    Middle Ages
    After the
    Bronze Age collapse
    , there is a gap of more than two millennia before the re-appearance of the double-headed eagle motif. The earliest occurrence in the context of the
    Byzantine Empire
    appears to be on a silk brocade dated to the 10th century, which was, however, likely manufactured in
    Islamic Spain
    ;
    [5]
    similarly early examples, from the 10th or 11th century, are from
    Bulgaria
    [6]
    and from
    France
    .
    [7]
    Byzantine Empire
    Further information:
    Aquila
    and
    Byzantine flags and insignia
    The double-headed eagle device used by
    John VIII Palaiologos
    (r. 1425–1448)
    Double-headed eagles on imperial vestments of Empress
    Theodora Kantakouzene
    , from the
    Golden Bull
    of Alexios III of Trebizond, mid-14th century.
    The early
    Byzantine Empire
    continued to use the (single-headed)
    imperial eagle
    motif. The double-headed eagle appears only in the medieval period, by about the 10th century in Byzantine art,
    [5]
    but as an imperial emblem only much later, during the final century of the
    Palaiologos dynasty
    . In Western European sources, it appears as a Byzantine state emblem since at least the 15th century.
    [8]
    A modern theory, forwarded by Zapheiriou (1947), connected the introduction of the motif to Byzantine Emperor
    Isaac I Komnenos
    (1057–1059), whose family originated in
    Paphlagonia
    . Zapheiriou supposed that the Hittite motif of the double-headed bird, associated with the Paphlagonian city of
    Gangra
    (where it was known as
    Haga
    ,
    Χάγκα
    ) might have been brought to the
    Byzantine Empire
    by the
    Komnenoi
    .
    [9]