This systematic analysis of the gold and silver coinages of "King
Antigonos" is intended to explore the nature of the Antigonid cash
economy during the second and the third quarter of the third century BC.
The author's principal aim in reconstructing the precious metal coinage
of "King Antigonos" is to comprehend the way in which the mints
concerned functioned and to identify the major issues of the period.
This helps us to answer questions such as, whether or not production was
continuous; on which occasions/for which purposes the mints operated;
where and why the coins produced circulated and what their value at the
time was; finally, whether these issues outlasted their initiator,
Antigonos Gonatas. The macroeconomic profile of Antigonid Makedonia
during this period is completed by an attempt to quantify and to
contextualize these Antigonid silver issues. Explanations other than
military for the production of this coinage are explored and the
chronology and the role of those silver coins issued posthumously in the
name of Alexander that are currently assigned to the early reign of
Gonatas are reconsidered. Finally, the geographical distribution of
these Antigonid issues is reassessed.