Philistian coinage of this period was produced by coastal cities — most likely Gaza, Ashkelon, or a neighboring center — operating under Achaemenid Persian administrative authority while drawing heavily on Athenian coin types for their designs. The exact issuing city for this group remains unresolved; Gitler and Tal's classification acknowledges the ambiguity rather than forcing attribution. These were commercial instruments for a region deeply integrated into Mediterranean and Levantine trade networks, not civic prestige pieces.
The XXVI series in Gitler and Tal represents some of the rarest and least-understood emissions in the Philistian corpus.
Philistian coinage of this period was produced by coastal cities — most likely Gaza, Ashkelon, or a neighboring center — operating under Achaemenid Persian administrative authority while drawing heavily on Athenian coin types for their designs. The exact issuing city for this group remains unresolved; Gitler and Tal's classification acknowledges the ambiguity rather than forcing attribution. These were commercial instruments for a region deeply integrated into Mediterranean and Levantine trade networks, not civic prestige pieces.
The XXVI series in Gitler and Tal represents some of the rarest and least-understood emissions in the Philistian corpus.