Prymnessus was a minor Phrygian city whose civic coinage under the Flavians is poorly documented and survives in very small numbers. The conventus of Synnada — the Roman judicial district under which it fell — was an administrative grouping that gave smaller cities like Prymnessus the legal standing to strike bronze for local exchange, though many such cities issued only intermittently and in limited volume. The reign of Titus lasted just over two years, making any provincial issue attributable to that window inherently scarce by the constraints of chronology alone.
Prymnessus was a minor Phrygian city whose civic coinage under the Flavians is poorly documented and survives in very small numbers. The conventus of Synnada — the Roman judicial district under which it fell — was an administrative grouping that gave smaller cities like Prymnessus the legal standing to strike bronze for local exchange, though many such cities issued only intermittently and in limited volume. The reign of Titus lasted just over two years, making any provincial issue attributable to that window inherently scarce by the constraints of chronology alone.