Sikyon occupied an unusual position among Peloponnesian minting cities — geographically wedged between Corinth and Achaea, it maintained its own independent coinage rather than adopting the Corinthian pegasus stater system that dominated regional trade. This drachm belongs to a period when Sikyon was nominally aligned with Sparta during the early tensions preceding the Peloponnesian War, yet the city's mint continued operating with notable consistency throughout the conflict.
BCD 173 places this piece within a tightly sequenced die study; the BCD collection itself, assembled by a single specialist over decades, remains the definitive reference for Peloponnesian bronzes and silvers precisely because it prioritized die linkage over grade.
Sikyon occupied an unusual position among Peloponnesian minting cities — geographically wedged between Corinth and Achaea, it maintained its own independent coinage rather than adopting the Corinthian pegasus stater system that dominated regional trade. This drachm belongs to a period when Sikyon was nominally aligned with Sparta during the early tensions preceding the Peloponnesian War, yet the city's mint continued operating with notable consistency throughout the conflict.
BCD 173 places this piece within a tightly sequenced die study; the BCD collection itself, assembled by a single specialist over decades, remains the definitive reference for Peloponnesian bronzes and silvers precisely because it prioritized die linkage over grade.