Samos claimed Pythagoras as its most famous son with considerable civic pride, and that pride shows up persistently on the island's bronze coinage under the Severans. The philosopher had left Samos around 530 BC — reputedly fleeing the tyranny of Polycrates — and spent the rest of his life in southern Italy, yet Samos never relinquished the association. Invoking his name on imperial-era bronzes was a deliberate act of cultural positioning, advertising the island's intellectual heritage to the wider Roman world at a moment when Greek cities competed fiercely for status within their conventus.
Samos claimed Pythagoras as its most famous son with considerable civic pride, and that pride shows up persistently on the island's bronze coinage under the Severans. The philosopher had left Samos around 530 BC — reputedly fleeing the tyranny of Polycrates — and spent the rest of his life in southern Italy, yet Samos never relinquished the association. Invoking his name on imperial-era bronzes was a deliberate act of cultural positioning, advertising the island's intellectual heritage to the wider Roman world at a moment when Greek cities competed fiercely for status within their conventus.