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Æ25 - Hadrian ΑΡΓΕΙωΝ

Issuer Argos (Achaea)
Year 117-138
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Shape Round (irregular)
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Obverse lettering ΑΥΤ ΑΔΡΙΑΝΟϹ ΚΤΙϹΤΗϹ
(Translation: Emperor Hadrian the Founder)
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Edge Plain
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Additional information

Argos held an unusual position under Roman rule — nominally free as part of the Achaean province, yet deeply integrated into imperial cult infrastructure. Issues bearing Hadrian's name from Argos reflect his well-documented personal attachment to Greece; he visited the region multiple times and was initiated into the Eleusinian Mysteries, making him arguably the most philhellenic emperor to sit on the throne. Local bronze like this circulated within a civic economy that Rome largely left to manage itself.

The reference III#341 places this within a series tied to Argive civic bronzes catalogued under the province, though die matches across surviving specimens are infrequent enough to suggest limited original production.

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