The Iceni occupied what is now Norfolk and parts of Suffolk, operating as a client kingdom under Roman oversight in the years immediately preceding the Claudian invasion of 43 AD. Silver-plated bronze forgeries of native coinage — produced contemporaneously rather than in later periods — circulated alongside genuine issues, suggesting a shortage of quality silver or deliberate debasement within the tribe's own monetary system. Whether these were sanctioned by Icenian authorities or produced by independent forgers is unresolved.
The "retro contemporary" classification matters: this is not a modern fake but a period piece, struck within the same approximate window as the prototype it imitates.
The Iceni occupied what is now Norfolk and parts of Suffolk, operating as a client kingdom under Roman oversight in the years immediately preceding the Claudian invasion of 43 AD. Silver-plated bronze forgeries of native coinage — produced contemporaneously rather than in later periods — circulated alongside genuine issues, suggesting a shortage of quality silver or deliberate debasement within the tribe's own monetary system. Whether these were sanctioned by Icenian authorities or produced by independent forgers is unresolved.
The "retro contemporary" classification matters: this is not a modern fake but a period piece, struck within the same approximate window as the prototype it imitates.