Edessa occupied a peculiar position in the Roman imperial system — nominally a client kingdom under the Abgarid dynasty until Caracalla abolished it outright in 214 AD and refounded it as a Roman colony, Colonia Metropolis. The ΜΗΤ ΚΟΛ legend reflects exactly that colonial status, imposed barely a decade before this coin was struck under Severus Alexander. The city's Syriac-speaking population and its long history as a center of early Christianity sat uneasily beneath that Roman veneer.
Edessa occupied a peculiar position in the Roman imperial system — nominally a client kingdom under the Abgarid dynasty until Caracalla abolished it outright in 214 AD and refounded it as a Roman colony, Colonia Metropolis. The ΜΗΤ ΚΟΛ legend reflects exactly that colonial status, imposed barely a decade before this coin was struck under Severus Alexander. The city's Syriac-speaking population and its long history as a center of early Christianity sat uneasily beneath that Roman veneer.