Catalog
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| Issuer | Alexandria (Egypt) |
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| Year | 141-142 |
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| Reference(s) | IV.4#563 |
| Obverse description | Bare laureate head of Emperor Antoninus Pius facing right, rendered in the typical Alexandrian provincial style with moderately detailed portraiture. The effigy displays the emperor's characteristic beard and mature features. The surrounding Greek legend reads ΑΥΤ Κ Τ ΑΙΛ ΑΔΡ ΑΝΤωΝΙΝΟϹ ΕΥϹΕΒ, identifying the emperor by his full titulature. The coin surface shows heavy patination consistent with extended burial, partially obscuring finer details of the portrait and legend. |
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| Obverse lettering | ΑΥΤ Κ Τ ΑΙΛ ΑΔΡ ΑΝΤωΝΙΝΟϹ ΕΥϹΕΒ (Translation: Emperor Caesar Titus Aelius Hadrian Antoninus Pius) |
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| Additional information |
Year five of Antoninus Pius's reign — marked on this coin by the regnal year epsilon — fell during a period of remarkable administrative stability in Roman Egypt. Alexandria's imperial bronze coinage was produced under strict prefectural oversight, with regnal year dating a practice unique to Egyptian issues that allows unusually precise placement within a reign. The year 141–142 AD saw Antoninus negotiating the abandonment of Hadrian's Wall in favor of pushing the frontier north to the Antonine Wall, a campaign celebrated in Rome though Egypt remained entirely untouched by it.