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Amyntas Nicator

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Amyntas
Portrait of young Amyntas
Indo-Greek king
Reign95–90 BCE
Coin of Amyntas. Greek legend ΒΑΣΙΛΕΩΣ ΝΙΚΑΤΟΡΟΣ ΑΜΥΝΤΟΥ, Basileos Nikatoros Amyntou, "of the king Amyntas the Victor".
Coin of Amyntas Nicator. Obv: Bust of king. Rev: Seated Zeus.
Indian-standard coin of Amyntas, with Zeus-Mitra wearing a Phrygian cap.

Amyntas Nicator (Ancient Greek: Ἀμύντας Νικάτωρ, Amýntas Nikátōr, meaning "Amyntas the Victor") was an Indo-Greek king. His coins have been found both in eastern Punjab and Afghanistan, indicating that he ruled a considerable territory.

Date

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Bopearachchi places Amyntas c. 95–90 BCE, whereas Senior places him c. 80–65 BCE.

Coinage

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Amyntas struck bilingual silver coins with a variety of portraits. Most of these bear the reverse of sitting Zeus holding a victory palm and a small statue of Athena, which according to RC Senior may have indicated an alliance between the house of Menander I and the house of Antialcidas. Some of his coins feature the reverse of fighting Athena typical for Menander's descendants. The epithet Nikator (Victor) was previously only used on the Bactrian coins of Agathocles, a century before Amyntas' reign.

His bronzes feature the syncretic deity Zeus-Mithra wearing a phrygian cap and Athena standing at rest, both forming the vitarka mudra.

Amyntas also minted the largest silver coins of antiquity: double-decadrachms. These huge coins each have a diameter of about 65 mm and a weight of 85 g. A total of five such coins were found as part of a hoard from Khisht Tepe in northern Afghanistan, which is commonly known as the Qunduz hoard. Three of the coins shows the goddess Tyche seated and holding a cornucopia, while two of them show a seated Zeus holding Athena.

Overstrikes

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Amyntas is known to have overstruck coins of Heliokles II.[1]


See also

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References

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  1. ^ Bopearachchi, Osmund (2003). De l'Indus à l'Oxus, Archéologie de l'Asie Centrale (in French). Lattes: Association imago-musée de Lattes. p. 129. ISBN 2-9516679-2-2.

Further reading

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