There was a series of civic coinage issued circa A.D. 305-313 in the East by Diocletian, Galerius and Maximinus II as part of The Great Persecution of Christians. The cities that minted these coins were Antioch, Nicomedia and Alexandria. The obverse of these coins replaced the usual bust of an Emperor with a local god and the reverse usually related to a local festivity or deity. The Antioch issues depict some of the most famous statues in the city—the Tyche put up by Eutychides, the Apollo by Bryaxis of Athens, and what may be the Zeus Nikephoros in the Temple of Apollo at Daphne.
GENIO ANTIOCHENI, Tyche of Antioch seated on a rock, river-god Orontes swimming below.
APOLLONI SANCTO, Apollo standing lt., holding a patera and lyre, I in right field.
In ex. SMA
Struck in Antioch