Year 3 of Vespasian's reign coincides almost exactly with the destruction of Jerusalem — Titus's siege concluded in 70 AD while this coin was being struck at Alexandria. The Alexandrian mint operated under tight imperial oversight, and Egypt remained a personal possession of the emperor rather than a senatorial province, which is why its coinage ran on a separate regnal dating system entirely independent of the Roman tribunician calendar. The tiny module of this issue reflects a broader contraction in Alexandrian bronze fractions during the Flavian period, likely tied to reminting pressure following currency reforms early in Vespasian's reign.
Year 3 of Vespasian's reign coincides almost exactly with the destruction of Jerusalem — Titus's siege concluded in 70 AD while this coin was being struck at Alexandria. The Alexandrian mint operated under tight imperial oversight, and Egypt remained a personal possession of the emperor rather than a senatorial province, which is why its coinage ran on a separate regnal dating system entirely independent of the Roman tribunician calendar. The tiny module of this issue reflects a broader contraction in Alexandrian bronze fractions during the Flavian period, likely tied to reminting pressure following currency reforms early in Vespasian's reign.