Hierapolis in Phrygia — not to be confused with the better-known Syrian city of the same name — was a modest civic center within the conventus of Cibyra, one of four assize districts Rome organized in Asia Minor for judicial administration. The ethnic ΙΕΡΑΠΟΛΕΙΤΩΝ on this issue is paired with the magistrate name ΛΥΝΚΕΥΣ, a personal name derived from the mythological Lynceus, sharp-eyed Argonaut. Civic bronzes of this scale were produced for local exchange rather than inter-city commerce, and survival in any condition is genuinely uncommon for issues this small.
Hierapolis in Phrygia — not to be confused with the better-known Syrian city of the same name — was a modest civic center within the conventus of Cibyra, one of four assize districts Rome organized in Asia Minor for judicial administration. The ethnic ΙΕΡΑΠΟΛΕΙΤΩΝ on this issue is paired with the magistrate name ΛΥΝΚΕΥΣ, a personal name derived from the mythological Lynceus, sharp-eyed Argonaut. Civic bronzes of this scale were produced for local exchange rather than inter-city commerce, and survival in any condition is genuinely uncommon for issues this small.