Tenedos occupied a strategically vital position at the entrance to the Hellespont, and the island's coinage reflects the commercial pressure that came with controlling one of the ancient world's busiest maritime chokepoints. By the time these tetradrachms were struck, the island had long since lost genuine political independence, operating under shifting Roman and Pergamene influence following the collapse of Attalid power in 133 BC. The coins nonetheless circulated with authority across Aegean trade networks precisely because Tenedos remained a compulsory waypoint for grain ships moving between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean.
The Copenhagen and Aulock references place these within a closely related die sequence, suggesting concentrated production over a relatively short window rather than steady annual output.
Tenedos occupied a strategically vital position at the entrance to the Hellespont, and the island's coinage reflects the commercial pressure that came with controlling one of the ancient world's busiest maritime chokepoints. By the time these tetradrachms were struck, the island had long since lost genuine political independence, operating under shifting Roman and Pergamene influence following the collapse of Attalid power in 133 BC. The coins nonetheless circulated with authority across Aegean trade networks precisely because Tenedos remained a compulsory waypoint for grain ships moving between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean.
The Copenhagen and Aulock references place these within a closely related die sequence, suggesting concentrated production over a relatively short window rather than steady annual output.