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Stater

Issuer Kyzikos (Mysia)
Year 450 BC - 400 BC
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Technique Hammered, Incuse
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Reverse description Quadripartite incuse square, deeply punched and divided into four recessed compartments by a raised cross, with alternating smooth and granular surfaces within the quarters. The incuse design is characteristic of early Greek electrum coinage struck by the hammered method, where the reverse punch was driven into the flan to secure the metal during striking. The square is boldly impressed and well-centred on the irregular flan, as visible on this specimen.
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Mint Kyzikos (Mysia)
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Additional information

Kyzikos was the dominant source of electrum coinage in the Greek world during the fifth century, and its staters functioned as a de facto international trade currency across the Black Sea and Aegean networks — accepted well beyond any single polis's political reach. The city controlled access to the Propontis, and that geographic leverage underwrote the coinage's credibility far more than any state guarantee could.

Each Kyzikene stater was struck on a new die, which is why the type series runs to hundreds of distinct obverse designs. No two issues are identical.

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