Chios maintained a rare degree of monetary independence through much of the fourth century, even after the island's forced enrollment in the Second Athenian Confederacy around 377 BC. The magistrate name Democrates appearing on this issue helps narrow its placement within the series, as Chian tetradrachms were systematically catalogued by magistrate sequence — a practice that has allowed modern scholars to date individual dies with unusual precision relative to other Ionian issues.
The island's silver coinage drew on Aegean trade networks rather than local mines, with much of the metal likely arriving as payment for Chian wine, one of the most commercially valued exports in the ancient Mediterranean.
Chios maintained a rare degree of monetary independence through much of the fourth century, even after the island's forced enrollment in the Second Athenian Confederacy around 377 BC. The magistrate name Democrates appearing on this issue helps narrow its placement within the series, as Chian tetradrachms were systematically catalogued by magistrate sequence — a practice that has allowed modern scholars to date individual dies with unusual precision relative to other Ionian issues.
The island's silver coinage drew on Aegean trade networks rather than local mines, with much of the metal likely arriving as payment for Chian wine, one of the most commercially valued exports in the ancient Mediterranean.