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Didrachm

Issuer Chalkis (Euboia)
Year 500 BC
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Weight 8.22 g
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Reverse description A four-spoked wheel with a circular hub, enclosed within a plain raised ring, all set within a recessed triangular incuse punch of irregular form dividing the flan into three sunken compartments. The wheel motif, a long-standing civic emblem of Chalkis, is boldly rendered in high relief against the deeply incused background. The triangular incuse reflects early hammered coinage technique. No legend or inscription is present.
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Additional information

Chalkis was one of the dominant maritime and colonial powers of the archaic Greek world, having founded settlements across Sicily, southern Italy, and the Chalkidike peninsula — the latter named directly for the city. By 500 BC, however, Chalkidian commercial influence was already contracting under pressure from Athens and Eretria, its longtime rival across the narrow Lelantine Plain. The two cities had fought one of the earliest recorded wars in Greek history over that strip of fertile land, a conflict Thucydides noted drew in allies from across the Aegean.

Chalkidian silver coinage of this period is scarce. The city lost considerable autonomy after the Athenians defeated and cleruched the Hippobotai aristocracy around 506 BC.

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