Silver stater of Pharnabazus as Satrap of Cilicia (379-374 BCE), depicting a seated Baaltars. British Museum .
Silver coin of Datames (r. 385-362 BCE) with the God Baaltars on a throne, seated left, torsos facing, holding grapes, grain ear, and eagle in right hand, scepter in left hand, surrounded by the city walls. Cabinet des Médailles .
Baaltars (combination of "Baal " and "Tarsus "; Aramaic : בעלתרז B‘LTRZ ) was the tutelary deity of the city of Tarsus in the Persian Empire . His depiction appears on coins of the Persian governors (satraps ) of Cilicia at Tarsus before the conquests of Alexander the Great , in the 5th and 4th century BCE, such as Datames , Pharnabazes , and Mazaios , and also on coins of the early Seleucid Empire . The equivalent of Baaltars for the Greeks was Zeus .
Notes
^ Hastings, p.686
Cabinet des Médailles , Paris
Sayles, p.43
References
Wayne G. Sayles, Ancient Coin Collecting VI: Non-Classical Cultures Krause Publications, 1999, ISBN 978-0-87341-753-2
James Hastings, S R Driver, A Dictionary of the Bible: Volume IV, Part II (Shimrath - Zuzim) The Minerva Group, Inc., 2004 ISBN 978-1-4102-1729-5
See also
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