The "Audoleon type" name derives from the Paeonian king Audoleon, whose own Philip II-derived tetradrachms likely served as the direct prototype for this Celtic imitative series. The actual issuers remain unidentified — attribution to "eastern European Celts" is a geographic inference drawn from find-spot concentrations in the middle Danube region rather than from any documentary record. Celtic coinages of this class were not struck to honor or acknowledge Audoleon; they simply copied what was available and commercially trusted.
Die links across specimens suggest organized, if episodic, production rather than opportunistic one-off striking.
The "Audoleon type" name derives from the Paeonian king Audoleon, whose own Philip II-derived tetradrachms likely served as the direct prototype for this Celtic imitative series. The actual issuers remain unidentified — attribution to "eastern European Celts" is a geographic inference drawn from find-spot concentrations in the middle Danube region rather than from any documentary record. Celtic coinages of this class were not struck to honor or acknowledge Audoleon; they simply copied what was available and commercially trusted.
Die links across specimens suggest organized, if episodic, production rather than opportunistic one-off striking.