Among the earliest issues from Metapontion, this nomos dates to the first generation of the colony's independent coinage — a period when the city was still consolidating its agricultural wealth in the fertile Tarentine Gulf hinterland. Metapontion's reliance on grain was so foundational that the city reportedly dedicated a golden sheaf of barley to the sanctuary at Delphi. The incuse technique used on this and related South Italian issues of the period is associated with a deliberate regional convention, possibly originating from a single engraver or workshop tradition shared across Achaean colonies.
The Noe sequence places this piece within the inaugural die groupings — the earliest attributed to the mint.
Among the earliest issues from Metapontion, this nomos dates to the first generation of the colony's independent coinage — a period when the city was still consolidating its agricultural wealth in the fertile Tarentine Gulf hinterland. Metapontion's reliance on grain was so foundational that the city reportedly dedicated a golden sheaf of barley to the sanctuary at Delphi. The incuse technique used on this and related South Italian issues of the period is associated with a deliberate regional convention, possibly originating from a single engraver or workshop tradition shared across Achaean colonies.
The Noe sequence places this piece within the inaugural die groupings — the earliest attributed to the mint.