The Aedui occupied a strategically central position in Gaul and maintained close diplomatic ties with Rome long before Caesar's campaigns — ties that ultimately made them both collaborators and victims of the conquest. Their silver quinarii follow a broadly Celtic adaptation of the Roman quinarius type, a denomination the Gauls absorbed through trade and mercenary payments during the late Republic. The specific DT 3212 type belongs to a regionalized output that numismatists associate with the late La Tène monetary tradition, when Gallic tribes were increasingly minting to pay troops rather than for prestige.
The Aedui occupied a strategically central position in Gaul and maintained close diplomatic ties with Rome long before Caesar's campaigns — ties that ultimately made them both collaborators and victims of the conquest. Their silver quinarii follow a broadly Celtic adaptation of the Roman quinarius type, a denomination the Gauls absorbed through trade and mercenary payments during the late Republic. The specific DT 3212 type belongs to a regionalized output that numismatists associate with the late La Tène monetary tradition, when Gallic tribes were increasingly minting to pay troops rather than for prestige.