Phaselis occupied an unusual position among Lycian cities — geographically within the region but culturally and politically resistant to full integration into the Lycian League for much of its history. This bronze falls within a period when the city operated under the loose suzerainty that followed Rome's reorganization of Anatolian affairs after Apamea in 188 BC, which stripped the Seleucids of their western holdings and left coastal cities like Phaselis navigating new patronage arrangements. The city eventually came under Rhodian control before the League absorbed it.
Heipp-Tamer's classification of B58 places this among the mid-series civic bronzes, distinguished from earlier issues by subtle module and type adjustments documented across the Copenhagen and BMC holdings.
Phaselis occupied an unusual position among Lycian cities — geographically within the region but culturally and politically resistant to full integration into the Lycian League for much of its history. This bronze falls within a period when the city operated under the loose suzerainty that followed Rome's reorganization of Anatolian affairs after Apamea in 188 BC, which stripped the Seleucids of their western holdings and left coastal cities like Phaselis navigating new patronage arrangements. The city eventually came under Rhodian control before the League absorbed it.
Heipp-Tamer's classification of B58 places this among the mid-series civic bronzes, distinguished from earlier issues by subtle module and type adjustments documented across the Copenhagen and BMC holdings.