Hierapolis in Phrygia sat at the junction of several major trade routes and held considerable civic pride — the city minted prolifically under Nero, frequently naming local magistrates on the coinage as a mark of municipal autonomy within the Roman provincial system. The magistrate named here, Tiberius Dionysios, bore the Roman praenomen Tiberius, almost certainly adopted in honor of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, a common practice among provincial elites cultivating Roman patronage.
The Conventus of Cibyra was one of four assize districts in which Roman judicial authority was exercised in Asia — Hierapolis fell within it despite lying geographically closer to Laodicea's sphere.
Hierapolis in Phrygia sat at the junction of several major trade routes and held considerable civic pride — the city minted prolifically under Nero, frequently naming local magistrates on the coinage as a mark of municipal autonomy within the Roman provincial system. The magistrate named here, Tiberius Dionysios, bore the Roman praenomen Tiberius, almost certainly adopted in honor of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, a common practice among provincial elites cultivating Roman patronage.
The Conventus of Cibyra was one of four assize districts in which Roman judicial authority was exercised in Asia — Hierapolis fell within it despite lying geographically closer to Laodicea's sphere.