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Stater

Issuer Corinth
Year 400 BC - 375 BC
Type Standard circulation coin
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Obverse script Greek
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Reverse lettering Π
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Additional information

Corinthian staters of this period were among the most widely circulated coins in the Greek world, accepted across the Adriatic, Sicily, and into the Black Sea region — a reach that prompted dozens of colonial mints to strike near-identical types under Corinthian authority. The consistency of weight and fineness was deliberate policy, not coincidence, and made the stater function as a de facto trade currency across competing city-states.

Ravel's die study and the subsequent Pegasi corpus identified over 1,000 obverse dies for the classical series — an output suggesting sustained, high-volume production through the years of the Corinthian War.

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