Metokos ruled the Odrysian kingdom during a turbulent interregnum following the death of Seuthes I, governing a fractured realm that several dynasts contested simultaneously. The Odrysians, the most powerful Thracian kingdom of the fifth century, had reached their territorial peak under Sitalkes and were in visible political contraction by the time this coin was struck. Small silver fractions like this diobol circulated in a region where Greek coinage norms were being actively absorbed and adapted — the inscription itself, rendered in Greek letters, reflects that cultural negotiation.
Metokos issues are rarely encountered, with specimens appearing across only a handful of reference works and museum holdings primarily in Bulgaria.
Metokos ruled the Odrysian kingdom during a turbulent interregnum following the death of Seuthes I, governing a fractured realm that several dynasts contested simultaneously. The Odrysians, the most powerful Thracian kingdom of the fifth century, had reached their territorial peak under Sitalkes and were in visible political contraction by the time this coin was struck. Small silver fractions like this diobol circulated in a region where Greek coinage norms were being actively absorbed and adapted — the inscription itself, rendered in Greek letters, reflects that cultural negotiation.
Metokos issues are rarely encountered, with specimens appearing across only a handful of reference works and museum holdings primarily in Bulgaria.