Tyre's fractional silver coinage of this period was produced under Achaemenid Persian suzerainty, when Phoenician city-states retained striking rights as semi-autonomous entities useful to the empire for their naval capacity and commercial reach. The shekel standard used at Tyre during the late fifth and early fourth centuries BC was tied closely to the Babylonian weight system rather than the Attic standard gaining ground elsewhere in the Mediterranean — a deliberate distinction that kept Tyrian trade terms on Phoenician footing.
The HGC 10#324 attribution places this piece within a tightly defined emission series. Sunrise 134 specimens tend to show relatively consistent die quality, unusual for fractional silver of this antiquity.
Tyre's fractional silver coinage of this period was produced under Achaemenid Persian suzerainty, when Phoenician city-states retained striking rights as semi-autonomous entities useful to the empire for their naval capacity and commercial reach. The shekel standard used at Tyre during the late fifth and early fourth centuries BC was tied closely to the Babylonian weight system rather than the Attic standard gaining ground elsewhere in the Mediterranean — a deliberate distinction that kept Tyrian trade terms on Phoenician footing.
The HGC 10#324 attribution places this piece within a tightly defined emission series. Sunrise 134 specimens tend to show relatively consistent die quality, unusual for fractional silver of this antiquity.