Alexandrian bronze issues of Hadrian present a cataloging challenge that has occupied specialists for decades: the regnal year system used by the Alexandrian mint — marked by the "L" prefix — allows unusually precise dating within a reign, something most provincial series cannot offer. Year 11 (L ΙΑ) falls in 126/127 AD, during Hadrian's celebrated second tour of the eastern provinces, when he visited Egypt personally and took a sustained interest in Alexandrian civic life.
The ΚΥΝΟΠ ethnic links this piece to Cynopolis, a nome capital in Middle Egypt whose mint relationship with Alexandria remains only partially resolved in the literature.
Alexandrian bronze issues of Hadrian present a cataloging challenge that has occupied specialists for decades: the regnal year system used by the Alexandrian mint — marked by the "L" prefix — allows unusually precise dating within a reign, something most provincial series cannot offer. Year 11 (L ΙΑ) falls in 126/127 AD, during Hadrian's celebrated second tour of the eastern provinces, when he visited Egypt personally and took a sustained interest in Alexandrian civic life.
The ΚΥΝΟΠ ethnic links this piece to Cynopolis, a nome capital in Middle Egypt whose mint relationship with Alexandria remains only partially resolved in the literature.