Untikesken — the Iberian name for the settlement the Romans called Emporiae — was a genuinely unusual place: a Greek colonial town that had grown physically adjacent to a native Iberian settlement, the two communities sharing a wall and, eventually, a mint. The bronze coinage issued here in the mid-second century BC reflects that hybrid civic identity, produced at a moment when Roman military presence in Hispania was intensifying following the campaigns against the Celtiberian and Lusitanian confederacies.
The *as* denomination follows the Roman libral weight standard, a deliberate alignment with the occupying power's monetary system.
Untikesken — the Iberian name for the settlement the Romans called Emporiae — was a genuinely unusual place: a Greek colonial town that had grown physically adjacent to a native Iberian settlement, the two communities sharing a wall and, eventually, a mint. The bronze coinage issued here in the mid-second century BC reflects that hybrid civic identity, produced at a moment when Roman military presence in Hispania was intensifying following the campaigns against the Celtiberian and Lusitanian confederacies.
The *as* denomination follows the Roman libral weight standard, a deliberate alignment with the occupying power's monetary system.