GREECE 2025 ANCIENT GREEK TECHNOLOGY - PTOLEMYS ASTROLABE SILVER PROOF COIN

Bank Of Greece
SKU:
4388
€110.00
Current Stock:
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Expected release date is 30th Apr 2025

GREECE 2025 ANCIENT PTOLEMYS ASTROLABE SILVER PROOF COIN

ANCIENT GREEK TECHNOLOGY

PRE-ORDER AVAILABLE TO SHIP AT END OF APRIL

Denomination: €10
Diameter: 40 mm
Weight: 34.10 gr
Edge: plain
Material: silver (Ag) 92.5%
Packaging: coin box with certificate of authenticity
Maximum issue: 2,000 pieces
Minting quality: proof
Coin designed by: G. Stamatopoulos

Ptolemy’s astrolabe (or spherical astrolabe) was an ingenuous astronomical instrument of antiquity. It simulated the celestial sphere and its revolution. Unlike solid celestial globes marking the positions of the major stars and constellations, it is an armillary sphere: the principal celestial circles (equator, ecliptic with the zodiac constellations, etc.) are represented by seven rings articulated together. The outer rings were used for adjusting to the observer’s meridian and latitude, while the inner rings were calibrated and equipped with sights. Thanks to the use of sights, Ptolemy’s astrolabe, in addition to serving as a common teaching tool, was also used as an instrument of observation for measuring and recording the coordinates of stars and planets. Although no such astrolabe has survived, Claudius Ptolemy (100-170 AD) described the instrument in detail in his Syntaxis mathematica or Megiste, known in the West as Almagest.

The design of Ptolemy’s astrolabe on the obverse of the coin is based on a reconstruction by the Kotsanas Museum of Ancient Greek Technology.