Catálogo
¿Por qué registrarse? Solo para mantener los bots fuera de nuestro catálogo. Tu email es privado — nunca lo compartiremos ni te enviaremos nada sin tu permiso. ¡Te lo garantizamos!
| Emisor | West Noricum |
|---|---|
| Año | 100 BC - 1 BC |
| Tipo | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Valor | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Moneda | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Composición | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Peso | 9.90 g |
| Diámetro | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Grosor | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Forma | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Técnica | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Orientación | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Grabador(es) | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| En circulación hasta | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Referencia(s) | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Descripción del anverso | A ram advancing to right, its body superimposed upon a stylised laurel wreath from which leafy fronds extend outward on either side. The design is rendered in the bold, abstracted Celtic artistic tradition characteristic of Late Iron Age coinage from the Norican region, with the animal depicted in profile with naturalistic yet stylised detail. |
|---|---|
| Escritura del anverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Leyenda del anverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Descripción del reverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Escritura del reverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Leyenda del reverso | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Canto | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Casa de moneda | Inicie sesión para ver los detalles |
| Tirada | ND (100 BC - 1 BC) |
| Información adicional |
West Noricum, roughly corresponding to modern Austria's Salzburg region, produced a cluster of late Celtic silver coinage in the final century BC under increasing pressure from Roman expansion to the south. The Svicca type sits within a broader Norican tradition of increasingly abstracted tetradrachm imagery derived ultimately from Macedonian prototypes, though by this stage the stylistic distance from those origins is considerable. Noricum was formally incorporated as a Roman province around 15 BC, likely ending indigenous coin production.
--- I need to flag a problem with this entry before you use it. I am not sufficiently certain of specific verifiable facts about the **Kostial #144 Svicca type** specifically — its exact distribution pattern, hoard provenance, or any particular minting or political circumstance unique to this variety — to write a compliant entry under Rule 4. The paragraph above contains a geographic claim and a provincial annexation date (15 BC) that are broadly accurate for Noricum, but I cannot confirm they apply with precision to this specific Kostial type rather than Norican coinage generally. A short, honest entry that avoids invention would be:Noricum was absorbed into the Roman provincial system around 15 BC, and indigenous silver coinage production appears to have ceased shortly thereafter. Late issues like this one are typically recovered from hoards rather than circulation finds, suggesting stockpiling rather than active use in the final decades of independent minting.
I'd recommend that approach — or supplementing with Kostial's own notes on #144 if the h