Hieron II ruled Syracuse for over half a century, and his long reign produced a remarkably stable bronze coinage — rare for a Sicilian city in the third century BC. These heavy Æ pieces were issued during the final years of his rule, a period overshadowed by Hannibal's devastating victories over Rome at Lake Trasimene in 217 BC and Cannae in 216 BC. Hieron, nominally allied with Rome, died in 215 BC, and within two years Syracuse had switched sides to Carthage, triggering the Roman siege that ended with Archimedes' death and the city's sack in 212 BC.
The weight of this denomination — placing it among the heaviest bronze issues of the Syracusan series — reflects the city's continued economic ambition even as the broader Sicilian political situation was unraveling around it.
Hieron II ruled Syracuse for over half a century, and his long reign produced a remarkably stable bronze coinage — rare for a Sicilian city in the third century BC. These heavy Æ pieces were issued during the final years of his rule, a period overshadowed by Hannibal's devastating victories over Rome at Lake Trasimene in 217 BC and Cannae in 216 BC. Hieron, nominally allied with Rome, died in 215 BC, and within two years Syracuse had switched sides to Carthage, triggering the Roman siege that ended with Archimedes' death and the city's sack in 212 BC.
The weight of this denomination — placing it among the heaviest bronze issues of the Syracusan series — reflects the city's continued economic ambition even as the broader Sicilian political situation was unraveling around it.