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Stater In the name of Lysimachus

Issuer Byzantion (Thrace)
Year 175 BC - 150 BC
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Value Gold Stater (20)
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Reverse script Greek
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Edge Plain
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Additional information

Byzantion's gold staters struck in the name of Lysimachus were issued well over a century after that Macedonian king's death at Corupedium in 281 BC — a deliberate act of monetary conservatism by a city that had long operated under his authority and trusted his name to guarantee acceptance across Aegean trade networks. By the mid-second century, such posthumous Lysimachean types were circulating from dozens of mints, making die attribution to Byzantion specifically dependent almost entirely on the distinctive control marks catalogued by Marinescu.

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