Using the production and circulation patterns of the Asian cistophorus
as a case study, Hidden Power seeks to develop a better understanding
of Roman monetary policy in the province of Asia between its
establishment in the 120s BC and the beginning of the Mithraditic
Wars.
Hidden Power catalogues and illustrates some 1,737 cistophoric
tetradrachms and fractions from the mints of Ephesus, Pergamum, Tralles,
Laodicea, Apamea, Adramyteum, Nysa, and Smyrna. Most of the coins
included in the study are late cistophori, issues between 134.3 BC and
the 60s BC.
Appendix I provides a discussion of the late cistophori of Tralles
struck after 89 BC, showing not only the direct correlation between
cistophori and Roman military campaigns, but also Roman taxation.
In Appendix II, circulation data have been combined with data derived
from the Tralles die study in order to calculate cistophoric production
for the entirety of provincia Asia until the end of the late cistophori.
This estimate provides a means to assess the financial impact of Roman
taxation and exploitation by Roman imperatores over the course of the
first half of the first century BC.