Philistian coinage of the fifth and fourth centuries BC remains one of the least understood series in ancient numismatics — the issuing cities are largely unidentifiable, the political structures behind them poorly documented, and attribution often rests on stylistic groupings rather than inscriptions. Gitler and Tal's landmark 2006 catalog brought order to the chaos, but type XIII.14D sits in the "uncertain" column for good reason. These small silver pieces circulated in a region caught between Persian administrative demands and Greek commercial influence, with Attic weight standards adopted for practical trading purposes rather than any formal monetary alignment with Athens.
Philistian coinage of the fifth and fourth centuries BC remains one of the least understood series in ancient numismatics — the issuing cities are largely unidentifiable, the political structures behind them poorly documented, and attribution often rests on stylistic groupings rather than inscriptions. Gitler and Tal's landmark 2006 catalog brought order to the chaos, but type XIII.14D sits in the "uncertain" column for good reason. These small silver pieces circulated in a region caught between Persian administrative demands and Greek commercial influence, with Attic weight standards adopted for practical trading purposes rather than any formal monetary alignment with Athens.