See full images - free registration
Continue with Google - no registration! or register with email

Why register? Just to keep bots out of our catalog. Your email stays private - we will never share it or send you anything uninvited. We guarantee you that!

Stater - Lysimachos Kolchis imitation

Issuer Bastarnae Celto-Scythians
Year 100 BC - 100 AD
Type Log in to see details
Value Log in to see details
Currency Log in to see details
Composition Log in to see details
Weight Log in to see details
Diameter Log in to see details
Thickness Log in to see details
Shape Round (irregular)
Technique Log in to see details
Orientation Log in to see details
Engraver(s) Log in to see details
In circulation to Log in to see details
Reference(s) Log in to see details
Obverse description Log in to see details
Obverse script Greek
Obverse lettering Log in to see details
Reverse description Log in to see details
Reverse script Log in to see details
Reverse lettering Log in to see details
Edge Plain
Mint Log in to see details
Mintage Log in to see details
Additional information

The Bastarnae occupied the lower Danube region from roughly the 3rd century BC onward — a tribal confederation described variously by ancient sources as Celtic, Germanic, or mixed, depending on the century and the author's agenda. Their gold staters copying the Lysimachos type were not tribute coins or curiosities; they were functional currency, part of a broader barbarian tradition of adopting prestigious Hellenistic types whose wide recognition made them commercially useful far beyond any single tribe's territory. The Lysimachos prototype had been circulating in imitative form across the Pontic steppe for generations before these pieces were struck.

Castelin 1210 places these within a typologically dense group of Kolchis-style imitations where attribution to a specific issuer remains genuinely contested in the literature.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE