Attaos was a minor Lydian city whose civic coinage under Antoninus Pius survives in very small numbers — the catalog references here draw from a tight cluster of fewer than a handful of known specimens across major collections. The city's Greek name appears in the genitive plural on the coin, a standard Lydian civic convention, but Attaos itself left almost no literary footprint in ancient sources, making numismatic evidence effectively the primary record of its institutional life under Roman administration.
Attaos was a minor Lydian city whose civic coinage under Antoninus Pius survives in very small numbers — the catalog references here draw from a tight cluster of fewer than a handful of known specimens across major collections. The city's Greek name appears in the genitive plural on the coin, a standard Lydian civic convention, but Attaos itself left almost no literary footprint in ancient sources, making numismatic evidence effectively the primary record of its institutional life under Roman administration.