The Arcadian League coinage of the mid-fifth century BC represents one of the earliest experiments in federal Greek minting — member poleis surrendering independent monetary identity in favor of a shared federal type. Kleitor, a city in the northern Arkadian highlands, was among the contributing mints during this phase. The attribution to Kleitor specifically rests on die-linkage studies, most systematically by Williams, whose confederate coinage corpus remains the definitive sorting of these hemidrachms by producing city.
The League collapsed as a coining authority by roughly 450 BC when Sparta reasserted dominance over the region.
The Arcadian League coinage of the mid-fifth century BC represents one of the earliest experiments in federal Greek minting — member poleis surrendering independent monetary identity in favor of a shared federal type. Kleitor, a city in the northern Arkadian highlands, was among the contributing mints during this phase. The attribution to Kleitor specifically rests on die-linkage studies, most systematically by Williams, whose confederate coinage corpus remains the definitive sorting of these hemidrachms by producing city.
The League collapsed as a coining authority by roughly 450 BC when Sparta reasserted dominance over the region.