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Prutah - Alexander Jannaeus

Issuer Judea
Year 104 BC - 76 BC
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Weight 2.15 g
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Obverse script Paleo-Hebrew
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Reverse description Double cornucopia adorned with decorative ribbons, the twin horns curving symmetrically outward and filled with fruits, with a pomegranate depicted between the horns. The design is enclosed by a border of dots. The double cornucopia is a hallmark device of Hasmonean coinage, symbolizing abundance and royal prosperity.
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Alexander Jannaeus was the first Hasmonean ruler to mint coins with a Hebrew inscription on one face and a Greek inscription on the other — a deliberate bilingual policy reflecting the dual cultural pressures his kingdom navigated. His reign saw Judea expand to its greatest territorial extent since Solomon, funded in part by near-constant military campaigning. The prutah was the workhorse of that economy, struck in enormous quantities across roughly three decades of rule.

Jannaeus faced violent domestic opposition from the Pharisees; according to Josephus, he crucified 800 of them in a single episode. Some scholars have connected periods of die variety proliferation to specific political crises during his reign, though attribution remains contested.

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