Corinthian staters of this period circulated far beyond the Greek mainland — they were the dominant trade coin of the western Mediterranean and Adriatic, accepted from Sicily to the Illyrian coast without question. Corinth's commercial reach meant these coins were effectively adopted as a regional currency by non-Corinthian states, some of which struck near-identical imitations. The Ravel and Pegasi references here place this piece within a tightly catalogued sequence, and attribution to a specific die pairing remains the primary tool for distinguishing authentic Corinthian products from allied or colonial issues of Leucas, Anactorium, and Ambracia.
Corinthian staters of this period circulated far beyond the Greek mainland — they were the dominant trade coin of the western Mediterranean and Adriatic, accepted from Sicily to the Illyrian coast without question. Corinth's commercial reach meant these coins were effectively adopted as a regional currency by non-Corinthian states, some of which struck near-identical imitations. The Ravel and Pegasi references here place this piece within a tightly catalogued sequence, and attribution to a specific die pairing remains the primary tool for distinguishing authentic Corinthian products from allied or colonial issues of Leucas, Anactorium, and Ambracia.