This issue belongs to the coinage of Agathokles, tyrant of Syracuse who in 304 BC crowned himself king — the first ruler in the Greek west to adopt the royal title, a direct response to the Successors carving up Alexander's empire. The denomination itself reflects his ambitions: a heavy gold piece struck at a weight standard deliberately echoing Macedonian practice, positioning Syracuse as a peer power rather than a provincial city-state.
Agathokles had taken the war directly to Carthage in 310 BC, landing in North Africa — an audacious gamble that no Sicilian ruler had attempted. The gold coinage of his reign was almost certainly linked to financing that campaign and its aftermath.
This issue belongs to the coinage of Agathokles, tyrant of Syracuse who in 304 BC crowned himself king — the first ruler in the Greek west to adopt the royal title, a direct response to the Successors carving up Alexander's empire. The denomination itself reflects his ambitions: a heavy gold piece struck at a weight standard deliberately echoing Macedonian practice, positioning Syracuse as a peer power rather than a provincial city-state.
Agathokles had taken the war directly to Carthage in 310 BC, landing in North Africa — an audacious gamble that no Sicilian ruler had attempted. The gold coinage of his reign was almost certainly linked to financing that campaign and its aftermath.