The Bodiocasses were a Gallic people occupying what is now the Calvados region of Normandy, and their coinage reflects a tribal identity largely independent of the better-documented Armorican and Belgic monetary traditions. The boar — a recurring motif across Celtic numismatics but treated here with unusual abstraction — carried deep religious and martial significance in Gaulish culture, appearing on weapons, standards, and cult objects throughout the La Tène period.
Billon coinage among the Gallic tribes generally signals a late phase of production, when silver supplies were contracting under Roman economic pressure following Caesar's campaigns. This piece falls within a century-and-a-half window that ended with the effective absorption of northern Gaul into the Roman provincial system by the mid-first century BC.
The Bodiocasses were a Gallic people occupying what is now the Calvados region of Normandy, and their coinage reflects a tribal identity largely independent of the better-documented Armorican and Belgic monetary traditions. The boar — a recurring motif across Celtic numismatics but treated here with unusual abstraction — carried deep religious and martial significance in Gaulish culture, appearing on weapons, standards, and cult objects throughout the La Tène period.
Billon coinage among the Gallic tribes generally signals a late phase of production, when silver supplies were contracting under Roman economic pressure following Caesar's campaigns. This piece falls within a century-and-a-half window that ended with the effective absorption of northern Gaul into the Roman provincial system by the mid-first century BC.