Mints associated with the sanctuaries of Olympia and Epidauros transitioned from striking silver coinage on the Aiginetan weight standard to the symmachic standard, ca. 16% lighter, in the 250s or 240s BC, decades before other states in southern Greece. The light weight of these new coins dissuaded foreign visitors from removing them when they departed, stabilising the local money supply, while their types advertised the prestige of the local penteteric festivals amid increased competition from new festivals of similar status throughout the Mediterranean. This is an example of how Panhellenic sanctuaries could exert influence over monetary trends in the Hellenistic period
Two fragmentary specimens of Greek epigraphy, both inscribed within a century of one another (ca. 45...
This paper details a study of the coinage of Susa struck prior to Seleukos's annexation of the provi...
Tetradrachms (here called tetrachma, as very often during the Hellenistic Period) are mentionned in ...
At the end of the Classical period, when the Macedonians had great influence over mainland Greece, t...
Presenting the weights from Olympia and Athens. Describing the different standards during Classical ...
At the end of the Classical period, while the Macedonians had great influence over mainland Greece, ...
Coinage, as we know it, originated in western Asia Minor around the middle of the seventh century.1 ...
Analysis of the owl, eagle and cockerel coinage previously attributed to Sophytes indicates that it ...
In the Hellenistic period, Alexanders and other coins of Attic weight were used as common currency, ...
The use of minted coins was one of the major innovations in the ancient world of the first millenniu...
A survey of the gold and copper coinages minted at Thessalonica between c. 408 and c. 629 concentrat...
As a result of this die study the coinage in the name of Alexander and Seleukos formerly assigned to...
The authors discuss a series of archaic silver fractions with a head of a ketos left or right on the...
International audienceThe federal Achaian coinage of the Hellenistic period was produced in a civic ...
The distribution of responsibilities between public authorities (city and magistrates) and private a...
Two fragmentary specimens of Greek epigraphy, both inscribed within a century of one another (ca. 45...
This paper details a study of the coinage of Susa struck prior to Seleukos's annexation of the provi...
Tetradrachms (here called tetrachma, as very often during the Hellenistic Period) are mentionned in ...
At the end of the Classical period, when the Macedonians had great influence over mainland Greece, t...
Presenting the weights from Olympia and Athens. Describing the different standards during Classical ...
At the end of the Classical period, while the Macedonians had great influence over mainland Greece, ...
Coinage, as we know it, originated in western Asia Minor around the middle of the seventh century.1 ...
Analysis of the owl, eagle and cockerel coinage previously attributed to Sophytes indicates that it ...
In the Hellenistic period, Alexanders and other coins of Attic weight were used as common currency, ...
The use of minted coins was one of the major innovations in the ancient world of the first millenniu...
A survey of the gold and copper coinages minted at Thessalonica between c. 408 and c. 629 concentrat...
As a result of this die study the coinage in the name of Alexander and Seleukos formerly assigned to...
The authors discuss a series of archaic silver fractions with a head of a ketos left or right on the...
International audienceThe federal Achaian coinage of the Hellenistic period was produced in a civic ...
The distribution of responsibilities between public authorities (city and magistrates) and private a...
Two fragmentary specimens of Greek epigraphy, both inscribed within a century of one another (ca. 45...
This paper details a study of the coinage of Susa struck prior to Seleukos's annexation of the provi...
Tetradrachms (here called tetrachma, as very often during the Hellenistic Period) are mentionned in ...