The Hercuniates were a Celtic people settled in the region of Pannonia, roughly corresponding to modern western Hungary and eastern Austria, whose coinage drew heavily from earlier Macedonian prototypes before developing increasingly abstracted local styles. The Kapostal type sits at the more devolved end of that stylistic spectrum — the result of generations of die-cutters copying copies rather than working from original Greek models. Kostial 821 and Göbl's classification place it within a well-documented regional series, but individual specimens vary considerably in die execution, making exact attribution occasionally contentious among Celtic numismatists.
The Hercuniates were a Celtic people settled in the region of Pannonia, roughly corresponding to modern western Hungary and eastern Austria, whose coinage drew heavily from earlier Macedonian prototypes before developing increasingly abstracted local styles. The Kapostal type sits at the more devolved end of that stylistic spectrum — the result of generations of die-cutters copying copies rather than working from original Greek models. Kostial 821 and Göbl's classification place it within a well-documented regional series, but individual specimens vary considerably in die execution, making exact attribution occasionally contentious among Celtic numismatists.