Year five of Antoninus Pius's reign — rendered here as L Ε in the Alexandrian regnal dating system — fell during a period of relative administrative calm in Egypt, though the province had barely recovered from the catastrophic Jewish revolt of 115–117 AD, which left Alexandria's Jewish quarter effectively destroyed. The Alexandrian mint operated on an entirely separate calendar and denominational logic from the Roman imperial system, answering to the prefect of Egypt rather than to Rome's central coinage authority.
The Æ34 module sits at the heavy end of Alexandrian bronze production for this reign, suggesting issue as a large nominal rather than casual struck bronze.
Year five of Antoninus Pius's reign — rendered here as L Ε in the Alexandrian regnal dating system — fell during a period of relative administrative calm in Egypt, though the province had barely recovered from the catastrophic Jewish revolt of 115–117 AD, which left Alexandria's Jewish quarter effectively destroyed. The Alexandrian mint operated on an entirely separate calendar and denominational logic from the Roman imperial system, answering to the prefect of Egypt rather than to Rome's central coinage authority.
The Æ34 module sits at the heavy end of Alexandrian bronze production for this reign, suggesting issue as a large nominal rather than casual struck bronze.