Roman Amethyst gem with engravings. Sarapis in the middle, Sol, Luna, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn in the middle ring (representing the days of the week), and the zodiac signs on the outside
1st - 3rd century CE
British Museum 1907,0717.1
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
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seen from United States
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seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from Japan

seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
Roman Amethyst gem with engravings. Sarapis in the middle, Sol, Luna, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn in the middle ring (representing the days of the week), and the zodiac signs on the outside
1st - 3rd century CE
British Museum 1907,0717.1

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I think we gotta kill Kronos for ruining two generations of brothers…
Older brother Hades makes me so sad like they were actually a family😔💔
A Sarapis statuette from the Bardo Museum in Tunis depicts the god in his normal attire and hairstyle, standing while resting his left hand on a snake-wrapped staff. The pose refers to Asklepios' Giustini types, which depict the god standing with his left hand on his hip and his right hand grasping a staff, often depicted with a snake wrapped around it. The two are composed in a similar manner, using the same arrangement of dress folds, the same pose, the same iconography, and a similar hairstyle. The visual connections between these two images underscore the theological similarities between the two gods: both are latecomers to the Greek pantheon, responsible for healing, associated with dreams and dream oracles, and expected to intervene in the affairs of mortals. Adopting Asklepios as a visual model, then, makes a highly legible statement of who Sarapis is and what the Greek viewer might expect from him. (Isis in a Global Empire, p95-96)
Coin of the Day #373 (5/12/2025)
Maybe the last of the coin show pickups for COTD…
Roman Province - Egypt
AE Drachm - 32mm 22.53g
Antoninus Pius 148-149 AD
Alexandria Mint
Obverse ΑΥΤ Κ Τ ΑΙΛ ΑΔΡ ΑΝΤWΝΙΝΟC CΕΒ ΕΥC
Bust of Antoninus Pius right, laureate, draped, cuirassed, from front
Reverse L ΔWΔΕΚΑΤΟΥ
Sarapis seated left in distyle temple, holding sceptre, Cerberus at feet
RPC IV 1117
Marseille. Au MuCEM, il y a une expo : “Alexandrie, Futurs Antérieurs”:
- stèle avec Agathodémon - période romaine
- stèle avec déxiosis = femme et enfant se serrant la main - 300 av. J-C.
- les 2 suivantes : stèle avec Sarapis, Isis et Harpocrate - 1er-2ème s. apr. J-C.
- bas-relief avec Agathodémon et Isis-Thermoutis - période romaine

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Bust
ca. 300 CE
“Lapis lazuli bust of Zeus Sarapis, modelled in the round, with a socket in the top of his head for the insertion of a kalathos.”
British Museum
gold finger-ring with (from left to right) Sarapis, Horus the Child, and Isis as human-headed uraei with tails entwined. 300-100 BCE; now in the British Museum...
Self indulgent Serapis for this series if you will… he is my favorite🖤