The Lycian League's late autonomous coinage occupies a narrow window between Rome's absorption of the East following Actium and the formal reorganization of the provinces under Augustus. These small fractions were struck when the League still maintained nominal monetary independence — a status that would become increasingly nominal as Augustan administrative consolidation tightened. The League would lose even that fiction when Claudius finally annexed Lycia outright in 43 AD, but these issues predate that end by seven decades.
SNG ANS 2 #107 places this piece within a well-documented sequence, though the hemidrachm denomination saw limited circulation reach beyond local trans-Anatolian trade.
The Lycian League's late autonomous coinage occupies a narrow window between Rome's absorption of the East following Actium and the formal reorganization of the provinces under Augustus. These small fractions were struck when the League still maintained nominal monetary independence — a status that would become increasingly nominal as Augustan administrative consolidation tightened. The League would lose even that fiction when Claudius finally annexed Lycia outright in 43 AD, but these issues predate that end by seven decades.
SNG ANS 2 #107 places this piece within a well-documented sequence, though the hemidrachm denomination saw limited circulation reach beyond local trans-Anatolian trade.