Abydos occupied a chokepoint of extraordinary commercial and military value — the narrowest crossing of the Hellespont, roughly a kilometer wide — and its coinage reflects a mint that profited from constant transit tolls and harbor fees rather than agricultural wealth. The city changed hands repeatedly between Persian and Macedonian spheres during precisely this quarter-century, and fractional silver like this hemisiglos likely served the dense daily commerce of ferrymen, merchants, and soldiers passing between Europe and Asia.
The magistrate name Gorgias appears on a small cluster of Abydene issues, suggesting a brief tenure of civic monetary oversight rather than a sustained series.
Abydos occupied a chokepoint of extraordinary commercial and military value — the narrowest crossing of the Hellespont, roughly a kilometer wide — and its coinage reflects a mint that profited from constant transit tolls and harbor fees rather than agricultural wealth. The city changed hands repeatedly between Persian and Macedonian spheres during precisely this quarter-century, and fractional silver like this hemisiglos likely served the dense daily commerce of ferrymen, merchants, and soldiers passing between Europe and Asia.
The magistrate name Gorgias appears on a small cluster of Abydene issues, suggesting a brief tenure of civic monetary oversight rather than a sustained series.