Germanic imitations of Roman gold coinage circulated widely during the third and fourth centuries, used by tribal elites less as currency than as prestige objects and gift-exchange tokens in a gift economy where Roman solidi and their copies signaled status and alliance. The prototype being imitated here cannot be pinned to a specific emperor, which itself is informative — Germanic die-cutters often worked from worn or partial exemplars, compressing multiple reigns into a single blurred archetype.
The weight sits close to the Roman quinarius standard, suggesting the craftsman had access to Roman scales or was deliberately calibrating to a known metric rather than simply copying form.
Germanic imitations of Roman gold coinage circulated widely during the third and fourth centuries, used by tribal elites less as currency than as prestige objects and gift-exchange tokens in a gift economy where Roman solidi and their copies signaled status and alliance. The prototype being imitated here cannot be pinned to a specific emperor, which itself is informative — Germanic die-cutters often worked from worn or partial exemplars, compressing multiple reigns into a single blurred archetype.
The weight sits close to the Roman quinarius standard, suggesting the craftsman had access to Roman scales or was deliberately calibrating to a known metric rather than simply copying form.