Ariel D.T. 2015. Hellenistic Coins and Stamped Amphora Handles from Horvat Kanaf. In Z.U. Maoz. Horvat Kanaf: Excavations in 1978–1980 and 1985, Final Report (Archaostyle Scientific Research Series 14). Qazrin. Pp. 49–56 (original) (raw)

Farhi, Y., Gadot, Y., and Lipschits, O. 2021. A Note on Two Unique Seleucid Bronze Coins from Ramat Raḥel, Israel. AJN 33: 45-56.

The authors describe two small bronze coins of Antiochus IV (?) and Demetrius I found during the excavations at Ramat Raḥel, near Jerusalem. Both coins reflect peculiarities related to their production, suggesting that they are new varieties, previously unknown to scholarship, of the "facing goddess reverse" type.

"The chronology of the hellenistic coins of Thessaloniki, Pella and Amphipolis", Proceedings of the XIVth International Numismatic Congress, Glasgow 1-3 September 2009 (2011), 251-255

During the second century BC the cities of Thessaloniki, Pella and Amphipolis present an important number of coin issues in bronze. Those very rich coinages are one of our principal sources for the history of these cities during the end of the Hellenistic period, the second and fi rst centuries BC. The coins in the name of these cities have not yet been systematically studied, even though they are very common in almost every excavation in Northern Greece. They are not of a very high artistic quality and didn't attract the interest of the museums numismatic collections. The coinage in the name of the three cities has to be associated with the bronze coinage in the name of the Macedonians as well as the coinage of the Roman quaestors of Macedonia, since all these coinages share the same types, and this made their study even more complicated.

H. Gitler and A. Kushnir–Stein, A Late Hellenistic Anonymous (?) Coin from South Phoenicia, Swiss Numismatic Revue 88 (2009), pp. 169–172.

Among coins found in the excavations at Dor there was a small, partly broken bronze coin, previously unpublished. The coin bears a date on its reverse but appears to have been issued anonymously. Several better preserved specimens of the same coin have recently come to light. They confirm Meshorer’s reconstruction of the date as ‘year 247’ but Meshorer’s Julian date for the coin is to be corrected by one year. The coin seems to originate in south Phoenicia, but the exact place of its manufacture can possibly be established only by further discoveries in controlled excavations.