Concept and representation of the body in the coins of ancient greece: gods and homeric heroes in the polis

Authors

  • Fabrizio Finetti Departament PE (physical education)S. Giovanni Bosco Secondary Institute for Human and Social Sciencies - Colle Val d'Elsa, SI (Italy) Author
  • Javier Olivera Betran National Institute of Phisical Education of Catalunya (INEFC) Barcelona Center (Spain) - University of Barcelona (UB) Author

Keywords:

body, numismatics iconography, goods, ancient Greece, Homeric Age

Abstract

The aim of this article is to reconstruct the nature and the function of the human figure represented in 
the Greek coins of the archaic and classic period through the semantic retrieval of numismatic icon as 
a historical source. The study has developed across a process of diachronic and diatopic search of the 
monetary images belonging at two iconographic schemes in which appears the figure of the charioteer and that of the warrior promachos. The basic prerequisite of this procedure and the consequent method of analysis, is the analogy between the verbal and the iconic language, according to a linguistic approach that consider the logical links existing among the different parts of the coin. Results indicate that the numismatical Greek language is a technical lexicon designed to assure a wide and effective communication, in that the human figure posses a central role and an undoubted 
polysemic value. A language that takes as base the most archaic Hellenic religious feeling filtered and 
diffused in the troubled reality of the polis in the most various political forms. For these considerations, the human body represented in the Greek coins is identified outright by the concept of 
divinity and in what corresponds to the hero, submitted to the link of his supernatural luck, must be considered to be a divine personage.  

Published

2024-08-03