This article focuses on the early coinage of the Akhaian cities of South Italy —
Sybaris, Kroton, Metapontion, Kaulonia, Poseidonia — against the backdrop of colonization.
Minting an early and distinctive series of coins, these centres were issuing coinage well before
their ‘mother-cities’, a phenomenon that has never been fully appreciated. With its
origins in a colonial context, the Akhaian coinage of Magna Graecia not only differs from that of
the early coin-minting states of the Greek mainland, it offers a case study that challenges
long-held assumptions and potentially contributes to a better understanding of the origins of
coinage. It does so by suggesting that coinage is much more than a symbol of authority and represents
considerably more than just an abstract notion of sovereignty or hegemony. The images or emblems
that the Akhaians of South Italy chose for their coins are those current in the contemporary
cultural landscape of the historic Akhaians, but at the same time actively recall the world of
the heroic Akhaians of the Bronze Age by referring to prehistoric measures of value. More than
his, the vicissitudes of colonial and indigenous history in parts of South Italy in the Archaic
period were not merely reflected in coinage, the coins themselves were central to the processes of
transformation. By boldly minting — constructing — their identity on coinage, the
Akhaians of South Italy chose money in order to create relations of dominance and to produce social
orders that had not existed before.