The Cantii occupied the territory of modern Kent — the corner of Britain closest to Gaul — and were almost certainly trading with and resisting Roman influence simultaneously in the decades this type was struck. Caesar's two expeditions into Britain in 55 and 54 BC forced a nominal submission from several Cantian kings, and the coinage that emerged in the following generation reflects a tribe navigating between indigenous tradition and continental pressure. The "sandwich" construction, with bronze outer layers over an inner core, is a production technique seen across several late Celtic British issues and likely reflects metal economy rather than deliberate debasement.
The Cantii occupied the territory of modern Kent — the corner of Britain closest to Gaul — and were almost certainly trading with and resisting Roman influence simultaneously in the decades this type was struck. Caesar's two expeditions into Britain in 55 and 54 BC forced a nominal submission from several Cantian kings, and the coinage that emerged in the following generation reflects a tribe navigating between indigenous tradition and continental pressure. The "sandwich" construction, with bronze outer layers over an inner core, is a production technique seen across several late Celtic British issues and likely reflects metal economy rather than deliberate debasement.