Catalog
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| Issuer | Atrebates and Regini tribes (Celtic Britain) |
|---|---|
| Year | 55 BC - 45 BC |
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| Currency | Log in to see details |
| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| Diameter | Log in to see details |
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| Orientation | Variable alignment ↺ |
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| Obverse description | Uniface type; the obverse die, struck from a heavily worn and degraded original, presents an entirely plain, featureless field with no discernible design elements. The die was derived from a prototype bearing a highly abstracted, schematic head of Apollo — the characteristic motif of the Atrebatic Selsey stater series — but successive use and deterioration of the source die has rendered all imagery indistinct. The gold plating, now extensively worn and corroded to reveal the bronze core beneath, covers the broad, irregularly shaped flan. |
|---|---|
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| Mintage | ND (55 BC - 45 BC) |
| Additional information |
The Selsey series staters were produced by the Atrebates, a tribe with direct continental origins — Caesar's campaigns drove significant cross-Channel movement of people and coinage habits into southern Britain, and the Atrebates under Commios established themselves in the Hampshire and Sussex region carrying Gaulish monetary traditions with them. That a plated counterfeit exists within this series is historically telling: gilded bronze forgeries were only worth producing if the genuine gold originals were circulating in sufficient volume to make deception viable.
Uniface plated pieces of this type are classified as contemporary counterfeits rather than later copies, meaning someone in the late Iron Age was actively debasing the currency in real time. The relatively low surviving weight of this example is consistent with bronze core shrinkage beneath a thin gold wash.