This tetradrachm belongs to Nero's fourth regnal year in Egypt — L Δ — placing it early in his reign, before the Pisonian conspiracy of 65 AD fundamentally altered his rule. Alexandria's mint operated under Roman authority but maintained a fiercely local character, producing coins to a billon or occasionally higher-silver standard that never fully integrated with the Roman denarius system. Egypt functioned as a closed monetary zone; foreign coinage was exchanged at the border and Alexandrian issues were not exportable as legal tender.
Milne 201 is well-documented, with the Dattari corpus providing the foundational die study for this type.
This tetradrachm belongs to Nero's fourth regnal year in Egypt — L Δ — placing it early in his reign, before the Pisonian conspiracy of 65 AD fundamentally altered his rule. Alexandria's mint operated under Roman authority but maintained a fiercely local character, producing coins to a billon or occasionally higher-silver standard that never fully integrated with the Roman denarius system. Egypt functioned as a closed monetary zone; foreign coinage was exchanged at the border and Alexandrian issues were not exportable as legal tender.
Milne 201 is well-documented, with the Dattari corpus providing the foundational die study for this type.