Stectorium was a Phrygian city of modest standing whose coinage output under Roman imperial rule was sparse and irregular. This issue falls in the opening year of Marcus Aurelius's sole reign following the death of Antoninus Pius in March 161 — a transition that prompted a wave of civic bronze issues across Asia Minor as cities updated their obverse types to reflect the new emperor. The magistrate named in the legend, Flavius Licinianus, is otherwise unattested in the epigraphic record, making this coin one of the few surviving traces of his office.
Stectorium was a Phrygian city of modest standing whose coinage output under Roman imperial rule was sparse and irregular. This issue falls in the opening year of Marcus Aurelius's sole reign following the death of Antoninus Pius in March 161 — a transition that prompted a wave of civic bronze issues across Asia Minor as cities updated their obverse types to reflect the new emperor. The magistrate named in the legend, Flavius Licinianus, is otherwise unattested in the epigraphic record, making this coin one of the few surviving traces of his office.