Argos controlled one of the most active civic mints in the Peloponnese under the Antonines, issuing bronze on a scale that suggests genuine civic pride rather than administrative necessity. The city's attachment to Hadrian was not purely ceremonial — he visited the Peloponnese and took a personal interest in the restoration of Greek cities, and Argos received tangible benefits from imperial favor during this period.
The BCD Peloponnesos sale (2006) dramatically revised attributions for Argive bronzes; the III#349 reference places this piece within the post-BCD framework.
Argos controlled one of the most active civic mints in the Peloponnese under the Antonines, issuing bronze on a scale that suggests genuine civic pride rather than administrative necessity. The city's attachment to Hadrian was not purely ceremonial — he visited the Peloponnese and took a personal interest in the restoration of Greek cities, and Argos received tangible benefits from imperial favor during this period.
The BCD Peloponnesos sale (2006) dramatically revised attributions for Argive bronzes; the III#349 reference places this piece within the post-BCD framework.