Komama was a minor Pisidian city whose coinage output was limited even by regional standards — the area remained largely under Seleucid influence until Rome reorganized Anatolia following the collapse of the Attalid kingdom in 133 BC, after which small civic bronzes like this one began appearing as local communities asserted administrative independence. The precise dating window of a full century reflects honest uncertainty rather than laziness; Pisidian civic bronzes of this size and weight class resist tighter attribution without accompanying hoard evidence.
Komama was a minor Pisidian city whose coinage output was limited even by regional standards — the area remained largely under Seleucid influence until Rome reorganized Anatolia following the collapse of the Attalid kingdom in 133 BC, after which small civic bronzes like this one began appearing as local communities asserted administrative independence. The precise dating window of a full century reflects honest uncertainty rather than laziness; Pisidian civic bronzes of this size and weight class resist tighter attribution without accompanying hoard evidence.