Myrina was an Aeolian city on the western coast of Asia Minor, and its autonomous silver coinage from this period reflects the town's position within a web of competing local minting authorities during the fragmentation that followed the Peloponnesian War. The obol denomination served small-transaction commerce in grain and olive oil markets along the Aegean littoral — not prestige exchange. At this weight, these pieces were produced in enormous quantities relative to their survival rate, lost easily and melted readily.
The Traité II reference places this firmly within Babelon's classification of Greek Asia Minor issues, a corpus that remains indispensable despite its age.
Myrina was an Aeolian city on the western coast of Asia Minor, and its autonomous silver coinage from this period reflects the town's position within a web of competing local minting authorities during the fragmentation that followed the Peloponnesian War. The obol denomination served small-transaction commerce in grain and olive oil markets along the Aegean littoral — not prestige exchange. At this weight, these pieces were produced in enormous quantities relative to their survival rate, lost easily and melted readily.
The Traité II reference places this firmly within Babelon's classification of Greek Asia Minor issues, a corpus that remains indispensable despite its age.