Germanic imitative gold coinage of this period occupied a complex functional space — produced by tribes without a mint infrastructure yet requiring prestige objects that carried Roman monetary weight and appearance. These pieces were not struck to deceive Romans but to circulate among Germanic elites for whom Roman gold carried inherent social and political value independent of its issuing authority. The prototype is unidentified, which is itself diagnostic: the copyist was working at sufficient remove from the original that the design degraded beyond attribution.
The 3.14g weight suggests the maker was still targeting the Roman quinarius standard rather than free-styling the flan.
Germanic imitative gold coinage of this period occupied a complex functional space — produced by tribes without a mint infrastructure yet requiring prestige objects that carried Roman monetary weight and appearance. These pieces were not struck to deceive Romans but to circulate among Germanic elites for whom Roman gold carried inherent social and political value independent of its issuing authority. The prototype is unidentified, which is itself diagnostic: the copyist was working at sufficient remove from the original that the design degraded beyond attribution.
The 3.14g weight suggests the maker was still targeting the Roman quinarius standard rather than free-styling the flan.