The Opuntian Lokrians occupy an awkward place in fourth-century Greek politics — nominally independent but repeatedly drawn into conflicts larger than their means. This stater was struck during the period when Lokris sat uncomfortably between Theban expansion under Epaminondas and the pressures of the Second Athenian League, a position that demanded coinage capable of meeting mercenary payments and interstate obligations without the luxury of a major mint's infrastructure.
The McClean 5428 reference places this among a well-documented but numerically small series. Dies for Opuntian staters show relatively rapid turnover, suggesting either low-volume episodic production or deliberate short runs tied to specific military financing needs.
The Opuntian Lokrians occupy an awkward place in fourth-century Greek politics — nominally independent but repeatedly drawn into conflicts larger than their means. This stater was struck during the period when Lokris sat uncomfortably between Theban expansion under Epaminondas and the pressures of the Second Athenian League, a position that demanded coinage capable of meeting mercenary payments and interstate obligations without the luxury of a major mint's infrastructure.
The McClean 5428 reference places this among a well-documented but numerically small series. Dies for Opuntian staters show relatively rapid turnover, suggesting either low-volume episodic production or deliberate short runs tied to specific military financing needs.