Year 18 of Antoninus Pius (154–155 AD) falls squarely within the most administratively stable stretch of the entire Principate. Alexandria's civic mint operated under the prefect of Egypt, a Roman appointee who answered directly to the emperor — no senate intermediary, no provincial governor between them. The Alexandrian bronze series ran on a regnal-year dating system unique in the Roman world, making precise attribution straightforward where other provincial issues are not.
The L ΙΗ designation — Greek for "year 18" — anchors this piece to a single twelve-month Egyptian fiscal cycle beginning in late August 154.
Year 18 of Antoninus Pius (154–155 AD) falls squarely within the most administratively stable stretch of the entire Principate. Alexandria's civic mint operated under the prefect of Egypt, a Roman appointee who answered directly to the emperor — no senate intermediary, no provincial governor between them. The Alexandrian bronze series ran on a regnal-year dating system unique in the Roman world, making precise attribution straightforward where other provincial issues are not.
The L ΙΗ designation — Greek for "year 18" — anchors this piece to a single twelve-month Egyptian fiscal cycle beginning in late August 154.