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| 表面の説明 | Stylized head facing right with long braided hair dressed in the calamistred fashion, bound by a fillet or headband. The hair is rendered in elongated, sinuous strands characteristic of late Gaulish artistic convention. The field surrounding the head is populated with S-shaped motifs and pointed annulets, filling the space in typical La Tène decorative style. |
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| 表面の銘文 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 裏面の説明 | Free horse galloping to the right, its neck rendered with beaded or pellet decoration, a hallmark of Belgic Celtic coinage. The field is scattered with pointed globules and annulets. Above the horse, a bird perched on the animal's croup faces right and holds a serpent in its beak, a recurring apotropaic motif in Ambiani bronze coinage of this period. |
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| 追加情報 |
The Ambiani occupied the Somme basin in what is now Picardy, and by the mid-first century BC were caught between Caesar's advancing legions and the fractious politics of the Belgic coalition. Their bronze coinage is thought to have circulated primarily as a local transactional currency during precisely the decades when Roman military pressure was dismantling the economic independence of the northern Gallic tribes. The DT#356 reference places this piece within a well-documented typological sequence, though die linkage studies on Ambiani bronzes remain less developed than for their gold staters.