Naxos was the oldest Greek colony in Sicily, founded by Chalkidian settlers around 734 BC, and by the early fourth century it had developed one of the most sophisticated coin engraving traditions on the island. The dies of this period are attributed to an anonymous master whose work is sometimes grouped stylistically with the signed engravers active at Syracuse — a proximity that reflects the intense artistic rivalry between Sicilian mints in the decades following the Athenian defeat of 413 BC.
The city itself was destroyed by Dionysios I of Syracuse in 403 BC, its population enslaved and dispersed. This issue predates that destruction by roughly seven years, placing it among the final flourishing of Naxian coinage before the mint fell permanently silent.
Naxos was the oldest Greek colony in Sicily, founded by Chalkidian settlers around 734 BC, and by the early fourth century it had developed one of the most sophisticated coin engraving traditions on the island. The dies of this period are attributed to an anonymous master whose work is sometimes grouped stylistically with the signed engravers active at Syracuse — a proximity that reflects the intense artistic rivalry between Sicilian mints in the decades following the Athenian defeat of 413 BC.
The city itself was destroyed by Dionysios I of Syracuse in 403 BC, its population enslaved and dispersed. This issue predates that destruction by roughly seven years, placing it among the final flourishing of Naxian coinage before the mint fell permanently silent.