The Corieltauvi occupied a territory roughly corresponding to the modern East Midlands, and their coinage is notable for being among the few British tribal issues to carry what appear to be abbreviated names — likely magistrates or rulers — rather than a single dominant dynastic name. "Aunt Cost" is one of several such inscriptions, poorly understood and possibly representing a title, a personal name, or a corruption through repeated die-copying. The blundered legend on this piece suggests it was struck from a deteriorating or carelessly engraved die, a phenomenon well-documented in late Corieltauvi silver production as Roman pressure on the tribe intensified prior to the Claudian invasion of 43 AD.
The Corieltauvi occupied a territory roughly corresponding to the modern East Midlands, and their coinage is notable for being among the few British tribal issues to carry what appear to be abbreviated names — likely magistrates or rulers — rather than a single dominant dynastic name. "Aunt Cost" is one of several such inscriptions, poorly understood and possibly representing a title, a personal name, or a corruption through repeated die-copying. The blundered legend on this piece suggests it was struck from a deteriorating or carelessly engraved die, a phenomenon well-documented in late Corieltauvi silver production as Roman pressure on the tribe intensified prior to the Claudian invasion of 43 AD.