THE ANTIKYTHERA MECHANISM

THE ANTIKYTHERA MECHANISM

The Antikythera mechanism was recovered from a shipwreck found in 1900 by sponge divers off the island of Antikythera. Built in Hellenistic times, this intricate device was used for astronomical calculations and has been described as the oldest analogue computer. Its more than 30 bronze gearwheels rotated pointers over different dials. Thus, manually selecting a date on the main dial – which represented the zodiac, as well as the solar and lunar years – shifted the smaller gears, so that the pointers on the other dials indicated the position of the selected date in the four-year cycle of the Panhellenic games (Olympia, Pythia, Isthmia, Nemea), the positions of the five then-known planets and the correlation with astronomy cycles that were of particular interest to the ancient Greeks. The mechanism also predicted solar and lunar eclipses. Research on the mechanism, which has fascinated scholars for decades, is still ongoing under the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project, which, using advanced imaging technologies, continues to provide impressive new insights into the mechanism’s complex inner workings.

Technical specifications

DENOMINATION
10€
DIAMETER
40.00 mm
WEIGHT
34.10 gr
EDGE
Plain
MATERIAL
Silver 92.5% (Ag)
PACKAGING
Wooden box with certificate of authenticity
MAXIMUM ISSUE
2,000 pieces
MINITING QUALITY
Proof
ARTIST
G. Stamatopoulos
Other coins of the artist
Not available