Ainos, a Thracian coastal city near the mouth of the Hebros river, was a significant commercial hub whose silver coinage circulated widely in the northeastern Aegean during the late fifth century. This issue falls within a narrow window of the Peloponnesian War's final decade, when Athenian influence over the region was fragmenting and Thracian dynasts were actively expanding their reach toward the coast. The city retained enough autonomy to strike substantial silver on the Chian weight standard throughout the period.
May's die study remains the authoritative reference; his sequence for this type places #269 among a relatively small die pairing, suggesting limited production within the broader series.
Ainos, a Thracian coastal city near the mouth of the Hebros river, was a significant commercial hub whose silver coinage circulated widely in the northeastern Aegean during the late fifth century. This issue falls within a narrow window of the Peloponnesian War's final decade, when Athenian influence over the region was fragmenting and Thracian dynasts were actively expanding their reach toward the coast. The city retained enough autonomy to strike substantial silver on the Chian weight standard throughout the period.
May's die study remains the authoritative reference; his sequence for this type places #269 among a relatively small die pairing, suggesting limited production within the broader series.