John Helladikos, vestes, judge of the Velum and Seleukeia and kourator of Tarsos (eleventh century)
Obverse
Bust of the Mother of God orans, holding a medallion of Christ before her. Sigla to left and right: P-ΘV: [Μ(ήτη)]ρ Θ(εο)ῦ. Border of dots.
Obverse
Bust of the Mother of God orans, holding a medallion of Christ before her. Sigla to left and right: P-ΘV: [Μ(ήτη)]ρ Θ(εο)ῦ. Border of dots.
Reverse
Inscription of seven lines. Border of dots.
ΘΚ̅Ε,Θ,
Ι̅ΕΣΤ,ΚΡΙ
ΤΗΤΗΛ,ΣΕ
ΛΕΥΚΕΙΑΚ
ΡΑΤΡ,ΤΑΡ
ΤΕΛΑ
.ΙΚΟ
Θ(εοτό)κε β(οή)θει Ἰω(άννῃ) βέστ(ῃ), κριτῇ τοῦ βήλ(ου), Σελευκεία(ς) (καὶ) κουράτωρ(ι) Ταρ[σ]οῦ τῷ Ἑλά[δ]ικο
Accession number | BZS 1947.2.152 |
---|---|
Diameter | 26.0 mm |
Previous Editions | DO Seals 5 no. 5.3. |
Translation
Θεοτόκε βοήθει Ἰωάννῃ βέστῃ, κριτῇ τοῦ βήλου, Σελευκείας καὶ κουράτωρι Ταρσοῦ τῷ Ἑλάδικο.
Mother of God, help John, vestes, judge of the Velum and Seleukeia, and kourator of Tarsos.
Bibliography
- Catalogue of Byzantine Seals at Dumbarton Oaks and in the Fogg Museum of Art, Volume 5: The East (continued), Constantinople and Environs, Unknown Locations, Addenda, Uncertain Readings (Open in Zotero)
- Ioannis Scylitzae Synopsis historiarum (Open in Zotero)
- Thirteen Seals and an Unpublished Revolt Coin from an American Private Collection (Open in Zotero)
- Das byzantinische Bleisiegel als Kunstwerk: Katalog zur Ausstellung (Open in Zotero)
Commentary
Tarsos was the most wealthy and powerful of the towns on the Cilician plain. Following its capture by the Arabs and use as a base for raids into Byzantine territory, it became the focus of Nikephoros Phokas’s eastern campaigns. The city was recaptured and was converted into an imperial kouratoreia, as well as the seat for a strategos, later under the authority of the doux of Antioch. By the end of the eleventh century, control passed into the hands of Armenian chieftains.
A Constantine Helladikos took part in the failed coup of Constantine Doukas in 913 (Skylitzes, 198-99); this seal is a rare attestation of the family name at a later date. The combination of kourator of Tarsos and other offices or titles held in Seleukeia appears on two other eleventh-century seals: Braunlin-Nesbitt, "Thirteen Seals," no. 11; and SBS 3 (1993): 192, no. 1019 = Seibt-Zarnitz, no. 2.2.1. For another combination of offices in Seleukeia and Tarsos, see also BZS.1947.2.162 and BZS.1958.106.2063.