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1 As With grain

Issuer Praeneste
Year 275 BC - 225 BC
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Composition Bronze
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Reverse description Horse's head in left profile, rendered in bold relief consistent with Central Italian aes grave casting technique, set above a ground line. A grain ear is depicted in the left field before the horse's muzzle, serving as a type symbol associated with the issuing city of Praeneste. The field is otherwise plain, with no legend or inscription.
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Mintage ND (275 BC - 225 BC)
Additional information

Praeneste — modern Palestrina, roughly 35 kilometers southeast of Rome — was a Latin city that retained enough autonomy in the mid-Republican period to strike its own heavy cast bronze coinage. This as belongs to the aes grave tradition, cast rather than struck, which places its production squarely within the monetary conventions of central Italy before Roman standardization gradually absorbed regional issues. Praeneste's civic identity was fiercely defended; the city had sided against Rome during the Latin War of 340–338 BC and paid for it with partial territorial loss, yet continued producing independent coinage for generations afterward.