Ambrakia, the Corinthian colony on the Ambracian Gulf, struck pegasi using the Corinthian weight standard — a deliberate alignment with the mother city's commercial network that dominated western Greek trade routes in the early fifth century. The specific die pairing catalogued under Ravel Colts 11 places this piece among the earliest of the Ambrakian series, predating the city's growing independence from Corinthian political influence that would sharpen through the mid-century.
The colony's mint was active enough by the Persian Wars period that Ambrakian coinage circulated alongside issues from Leukas and Anaktorion — sister colonies that shared both the type and the weight standard.
Ambrakia, the Corinthian colony on the Ambracian Gulf, struck pegasi using the Corinthian weight standard — a deliberate alignment with the mother city's commercial network that dominated western Greek trade routes in the early fifth century. The specific die pairing catalogued under Ravel Colts 11 places this piece among the earliest of the Ambrakian series, predating the city's growing independence from Corinthian political influence that would sharpen through the mid-century.
The colony's mint was active enough by the Persian Wars period that Ambrakian coinage circulated alongside issues from Leukas and Anaktorion — sister colonies that shared both the type and the weight standard.