Gortyna was one of Crete's dominant poleis during the third century BC, frequently in conflict with Knossos for island supremacy. The city controlled fertile land in the Mesara plain and maintained enough civic authority to produce a sustained bronze coinage — an infrastructure commitment that smaller Cretan communities rarely managed. Copenhagen 458 is among the better-documented die pairings for this type, with Svoronos's Cretan corpus remaining the foundational reference more than a century after its publication.
Gortyna was one of Crete's dominant poleis during the third century BC, frequently in conflict with Knossos for island supremacy. The city controlled fertile land in the Mesara plain and maintained enough civic authority to produce a sustained bronze coinage — an infrastructure commitment that smaller Cretan communities rarely managed. Copenhagen 458 is among the better-documented die pairings for this type, with Svoronos's Cretan corpus remaining the foundational reference more than a century after its publication.