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| 背面描述 | Deep square incuse punch divided by eight raised ridges radiating from a central boss, forming a multi-pointed star or wheel pattern within the sunken compartment. The incuse square is sharply defined with slightly raised borders, typical of early hammered coinage produced in western Asia Minor and Lycia during the late Archaic period. The design is entirely geometric and devoid of inscription or figural imagery, representing the standard reverse type of early Lycian dynastic staters. The incuse technique reflects the influence of East Greek minting practice. |
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| 铸造量 | ND (500 BC - 480 BC) |
| 附加信息 |
Lycian dynastic coinage of the early fifth century predates the region's fuller integration into Achaemenid administrative structures, and these early staters are among the most difficult to attribute — the dynastic sequence for this period remains contested, with some scholars folding several "uncertain" issues into the orbit of Kuprlli or his predecessors based on coin-typology alone. Müseler's ongoing work has progressively tightened attributions, but the earliest bracket remains genuinely unresolved.