Ancyra in Lydia — not to be confused with the more famous Galatian capital — operated under the administrative jurisdiction of the Sardis conventus, one of the assize districts through which Rome organized provincial judicial and civic life in Asia Minor. The magistrate named in the legend, Louкios Krassos, was a local archon whose tenure almost certainly fell within the early years of Trajan's reign, when civic bronze coinage across western Anatolia saw a marked increase tied to infrastructure investment along the royal road network.
Ancyra in Lydia — not to be confused with the more famous Galatian capital — operated under the administrative jurisdiction of the Sardis conventus, one of the assize districts through which Rome organized provincial judicial and civic life in Asia Minor. The magistrate named in the legend, Louкios Krassos, was a local archon whose tenure almost certainly fell within the early years of Trajan's reign, when civic bronze coinage across western Anatolia saw a marked increase tied to infrastructure investment along the royal road network.