The Boeotian League's autonomous coinage of this period reflects the political turbulence following the death of Alexander the Great, when the koinon reasserted itself amid the wars of the Diadochi. Thebes had been razed by Alexander in 335 BC, and its eventual partial resettlement under Cassander around 316 BC brought renewed institutional confidence to the League — visible in the resumption of silver coinage on the Aeginetan standard.
The multiple concordance references across BCD, Weber, and Copenhagen collections suggest this is a well-documented emission, though precise die-linking within the 304–294 window remains the work of specialists rather than the catalog alone.
The Boeotian League's autonomous coinage of this period reflects the political turbulence following the death of Alexander the Great, when the koinon reasserted itself amid the wars of the Diadochi. Thebes had been razed by Alexander in 335 BC, and its eventual partial resettlement under Cassander around 316 BC brought renewed institutional confidence to the League — visible in the resumption of silver coinage on the Aeginetan standard.
The multiple concordance references across BCD, Weber, and Copenhagen collections suggest this is a well-documented emission, though precise die-linking within the 304–294 window remains the work of specialists rather than the catalog alone.