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| Issuer | Atrebates and Regini tribes (Celtic Britain) |
|---|---|
| Year | 10-45 |
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| Composition | Silver |
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| Obverse description | Two crossed wreaths forming a cruciform pattern dividing the field into four angles, with a pellet-in-ring motif at the centre intersection. Pellets are distributed within the angles of the cross, and the Latin inscription CRAB appears distributed across the four quarters. The design is executed in a characteristically schematic Celtic style on a small, irregularly flan. |
|---|---|
| Obverse script | Latin |
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| Additional information |
The Atrebates and Regini occupied a broad swathe of southern Britain stretching from modern Hampshire into Sussex, and their coinage in the final decades before the Claudian invasion of 43 AD reflects a tribe increasingly entangled with Roman commercial networks across the Channel. These lightweight silver units — fractional in function — circulated alongside larger gold and silver denominations in a regional economy where Roman goods, wine amphorae among them, were arriving in exchange for slaves, cattle, and grain. The die-cutting on pieces of this type is notably compact given the small flan, a technical constraint that pushed engravers toward abstracted imagery.