Ayodhya's civic coinage belongs to a long-running local series that persisted well into the early centuries CE, outlasting the Mauryan empire that had nominally absorbed much of the Gangetic plain. The attribution to Raja Ayumitrasa places this piece within a sequence of named local rulers whose historical identities remain largely unverifiable through textual sources — the coins are often the only surviving evidence these figures existed at all.
Mitchiner's cataloguing of this series drew heavily on hoard evidence from Uttar Pradesh, where Ayodhya bronzes surface with enough frequency to suggest active local circulation rather than ceremonial issue.
Ayodhya's civic coinage belongs to a long-running local series that persisted well into the early centuries CE, outlasting the Mauryan empire that had nominally absorbed much of the Gangetic plain. The attribution to Raja Ayumitrasa places this piece within a sequence of named local rulers whose historical identities remain largely unverifiable through textual sources — the coins are often the only surviving evidence these figures existed at all.
Mitchiner's cataloguing of this series drew heavily on hoard evidence from Uttar Pradesh, where Ayodhya bronzes surface with enough frequency to suggest active local circulation rather than ceremonial issue.