Cora was a Latin town in the Volscian hills south of Rome, and its coinage is exceptionally rare — the city struck silver on only a very limited scale, likely during the period when Latin communities retained a degree of monetary autonomy before Roman administrative consolidation rendered local issues obsolete. HN Italy 247 is known from a handful of specimens, and the precise dating window remains debated among scholars of central Italian numismatics.
Cora was a Latin town in the Volscian hills south of Rome, and its coinage is exceptionally rare — the city struck silver on only a very limited scale, likely during the period when Latin communities retained a degree of monetary autonomy before Roman administrative consolidation rendered local issues obsolete. HN Italy 247 is known from a handful of specimens, and the precise dating window remains debated among scholars of central Italian numismatics.