Hypaepa, a small Lydian city in the Cayster valley, held enough civic pride to strike coins jointly in the names of both Valerian and his son Gallienus during their co-reign — a pairing that ended when Valerian was captured by Shapur I of Persia in 260 AD, the only Roman emperor ever taken prisoner by a foreign enemy. The magistrate name ΚΟΝΔΙΑΝΟΥ identifies the local strategos responsible for authorizing the issue, a detail that anchors this coin to a specific administrative moment rather than the broader co-reign.
Hypaepa, a small Lydian city in the Cayster valley, held enough civic pride to strike coins jointly in the names of both Valerian and his son Gallienus during their co-reign — a pairing that ended when Valerian was captured by Shapur I of Persia in 260 AD, the only Roman emperor ever taken prisoner by a foreign enemy. The magistrate name ΚΟΝΔΙΑΝΟΥ identifies the local strategos responsible for authorizing the issue, a detail that anchors this coin to a specific administrative moment rather than the broader co-reign.