Ennea Hodoi — "Nine Roads" — was the strategically vital crossing point on the Strymon River contested by Athens, Persia, and various Thracian powers across the fifth century. The Athenians suffered a catastrophic defeat there in 465 BC when ten thousand colonists were massacred by the Edoni tribe, and the site later became Amphipolis. A coin attributed to this location predating that violence survives in a denomination so small it speaks to everyday local exchange rather than any imperial ambition.
Ennea Hodoi — "Nine Roads" — was the strategically vital crossing point on the Strymon River contested by Athens, Persia, and various Thracian powers across the fifth century. The Athenians suffered a catastrophic defeat there in 465 BC when ten thousand colonists were massacred by the Edoni tribe, and the site later became Amphipolis. A coin attributed to this location predating that violence survives in a denomination so small it speaks to everyday local exchange rather than any imperial ambition.