This tetradrachm belongs to Diocletian's fourth regnal year as reckoned by the Alexandrian calendar — an administrative system the Romans preserved precisely because Egypt's fiscal machinery, particularly grain taxation, depended on it. Alexandria's mint was unusual among Roman provincial operations in that it continued striking tetradrachms in a debased billon long after the rest of the empire had abandoned comparable denominations, functioning as a closed currency zone where Egyptian coins could not legally circulate outside the province, nor foreign coins within it.
Diocletian would later close this monetary isolation himself with his currency reforms of 296 AD, integrating Egypt into the imperial system and shutting down the Alexandrian mint's distinctive provincial output entirely.
This tetradrachm belongs to Diocletian's fourth regnal year as reckoned by the Alexandrian calendar — an administrative system the Romans preserved precisely because Egypt's fiscal machinery, particularly grain taxation, depended on it. Alexandria's mint was unusual among Roman provincial operations in that it continued striking tetradrachms in a debased billon long after the rest of the empire had abandoned comparable denominations, functioning as a closed currency zone where Egyptian coins could not legally circulate outside the province, nor foreign coins within it.
Diocletian would later close this monetary isolation himself with his currency reforms of 296 AD, integrating Egypt into the imperial system and shutting down the Alexandrian mint's distinctive provincial output entirely.