By the mid-first century BC, Sparta — long stripped of political relevance by Roman reorganization of the Peloponnese — was producing civic bronze coinage largely as a symbol of municipal autonomy rather than economic necessity. The city had been detached from the Achaean League and granted a nominal "free" status by Rome, a condition that permitted local bronze issues while silver remained firmly under Roman control.
The BCD Peloponnesos reference places this among a tightly catalogued group assembled by the collector known as BCD, whose Peloponnesian holdings remain the benchmark for attribution of obscure civic bronzes from this region.
By the mid-first century BC, Sparta — long stripped of political relevance by Roman reorganization of the Peloponnese — was producing civic bronze coinage largely as a symbol of municipal autonomy rather than economic necessity. The city had been detached from the Achaean League and granted a nominal "free" status by Rome, a condition that permitted local bronze issues while silver remained firmly under Roman control.
The BCD Peloponnesos reference places this among a tightly catalogued group assembled by the collector known as BCD, whose Peloponnesian holdings remain the benchmark for attribution of obscure civic bronzes from this region.