Barbarian imitations of Roman aurei from this period were not crude forgeries intended to deceive — they functioned as prestige objects and gift currency within Germanic gift-exchange economies, where the weight in gold mattered far more than the fidelity of the portrait. The prototype here is unidentified, which is itself informative: this piece likely passed through enough hands, and enough generations, that the original imperial source became irrelevant to its users.
The MN 27# reference places it within a loosely catalogued group where attribution remains genuinely contested among specialists.
Barbarian imitations of Roman aurei from this period were not crude forgeries intended to deceive — they functioned as prestige objects and gift currency within Germanic gift-exchange economies, where the weight in gold mattered far more than the fidelity of the portrait. The prototype here is unidentified, which is itself informative: this piece likely passed through enough hands, and enough generations, that the original imperial source became irrelevant to its users.
The MN 27# reference places it within a loosely catalogued group where attribution remains genuinely contested among specialists.