Year 20 of Antoninus Pius's reign, which is what the "L K" regnal date denotes, fell during a period of unusual administrative stability in Roman Egypt. The Alexandria mint dated its coins by regnal year rather than consular year — a practice inherited from Ptolemaic tradition that makes precise attribution straightforward but also underscores how thoroughly Egypt was administered as a personal imperial estate, separate in law and custom from the rest of the empire. Romans of senatorial rank were barred from even entering the province without explicit permission.
Year 20 of Antoninus Pius's reign, which is what the "L K" regnal date denotes, fell during a period of unusual administrative stability in Roman Egypt. The Alexandria mint dated its coins by regnal year rather than consular year — a practice inherited from Ptolemaic tradition that makes precise attribution straightforward but also underscores how thoroughly Egypt was administered as a personal imperial estate, separate in law and custom from the rest of the empire. Romans of senatorial rank were barred from even entering the province without explicit permission.