Olbia's bronze coinage of this period is unusual in the Greek world for its sheer mass — a quarter-obol denomination struck at weights that rival the silver fractions of wealthier poleis. The city on the north Pontic coast operated in a commercial environment dominated by Scythian trade, and its monetary system developed largely independent of Aegean norms, which explains the idiosyncratic denominations and the heavy fabric that persists across this series.
Anokhin's work on Olbian coinage remains the essential reference for sequencing these bronzes, though die linkage studies have since complicated his chronology at the margins.
Olbia's bronze coinage of this period is unusual in the Greek world for its sheer mass — a quarter-obol denomination struck at weights that rival the silver fractions of wealthier poleis. The city on the north Pontic coast operated in a commercial environment dominated by Scythian trade, and its monetary system developed largely independent of Aegean norms, which explains the idiosyncratic denominations and the heavy fabric that persists across this series.
Anokhin's work on Olbian coinage remains the essential reference for sequencing these bronzes, though die linkage studies have since complicated his chronology at the margins.