Ennea Hodoi — "Nine Roads" — was the strategic settlement at the junction of routes crossing the Strymon River, contested fiercely between Thracian tribes, Macedonian interests, and later Athenian colonial ambitions. Athens would attempt to plant a colony here in 465 BC, losing ten thousand settlers to the Edonian Thracians at the disaster of Drabescus. The issuing authority of this electrum stater remains genuinely unresolved among specialists, with Kraay and Hirmer attributing it to an uncertain Thraco-Macedonian mint rather than forcing an assignment the evidence won't support.
Ennea Hodoi — "Nine Roads" — was the strategic settlement at the junction of routes crossing the Strymon River, contested fiercely between Thracian tribes, Macedonian interests, and later Athenian colonial ambitions. Athens would attempt to plant a colony here in 465 BC, losing ten thousand settlers to the Edonian Thracians at the disaster of Drabescus. The issuing authority of this electrum stater remains genuinely unresolved among specialists, with Kraay and Hirmer attributing it to an uncertain Thraco-Macedonian mint rather than forcing an assignment the evidence won't support.