Populonia, the only Etruscan city known to have minted coins directly from locally smelted ore, drew its silver from the iron-rich deposits of Elba and the surrounding Campigliese mines. This series predates Roman monetary organization by well over a century and circulated in a commercial environment dominated by weight-based exchange rather than fiduciary trust — the heavy fabric reflects that reality directly.
At over 22 grams, this is among the heaviest silver issues in the entire Italian pre-Roman sequence, struck on a standard with no surviving parallel in contemporary Etruscan coinage.
Populonia, the only Etruscan city known to have minted coins directly from locally smelted ore, drew its silver from the iron-rich deposits of Elba and the surrounding Campigliese mines. This series predates Roman monetary organization by well over a century and circulated in a commercial environment dominated by weight-based exchange rather than fiduciary trust — the heavy fabric reflects that reality directly.
At over 22 grams, this is among the heaviest silver issues in the entire Italian pre-Roman sequence, struck on a standard with no surviving parallel in contemporary Etruscan coinage.