Ioel
Ioel | |
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King of Aksum | |
Reign | mid 6th century-c.590 |
Predecessor | WʽZB |
Successor | Israel |
Ioel, or Joel (mid 6th century), was a king of the
Based on the typology and quality of metal in his coins, Ioel's reign has been dated firmly after the reign of Kaleb, although authorities differ exactly what order he ruled:
Coinage
Coins were issued during Ioel's reign in three metals: gold, silver, and copper. They have been categorized into eight types, comprising two types of gold coins, two of silver, and four of copper. Munro-Hay notes that the gold content in those coins are so debased that they could not have been "issued for anything other than prestige, since they could not have been acceptable as gold pieces."[5] The gold types, like most of his fellow Aksumite kings, are characterized by busts of the ruler on both sides, with stalks of barley on either side. The silver types are markedly different, with one silver type similar to the gold types, and the other having a different design on the reverse: words in Greek meaning "By the Grace of Ch[rist]". The second silver type is also the only bilingual coin issued by the kings of Aksum. While all four of the copper types have a frontal bust or profile of Ioel on the obverse, the reverse sides of three are characterized by crosses while the fourth shows Ioel in profile holding a cross in his hand.[6]
References
- ^ Wolfgang Hahn, "Askumite Numismatics - A critical survey of recent Research", Revue Numismatique, 155 (2000), p. 299
- ^ Munro-Hay, Stuart C. (1984). The Coinage of Aksum. Manohar. pp. 129–141.
- ^ Munro-Hay, Aksum (Edinburgh: University Press, 1991), pp. 67f
- ISBN 978-1-910807-10-1
- ISBN 0-300-05819-5
- ^ Munro-Hay, Coinage, pp. 132-139