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Tetradrachm Unfaithful Legend Type

Issuer Uncertain Eastern European Celts
Year 300 BC - 201 BC
Type Standard circulation coin
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Obverse description Laureate head of Zeus facing right, rendered in a characteristically Celtic barbaric interpretation of the Macedonian Philippic prototype. The effigy displays flowing locks of hair with schematised, pellet-like laurel wreath, prominent brow, large almond-shaped eye, and a full beard rendered in stylised wave patterns typical of Eastern European Celtic die-cutting. The portrait retains strong relief within a dotted border, with the neck truncation visible at the lower right of the field.
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Reverse script Greek
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Additional information

Celtic coinage in the Balkans and Carpathian basin developed primarily through imitation of Macedonian issues, particularly the tetradrachms of Philip II and Alexander III. The "Unfaithful Legend" designation refers to a specific class of these imitations in which the original Greek inscription was copied by Celtic die-cutters who did not read Greek — the letters progressively degraded across die generations into abstract marks that retain only a visual memory of the prototype's text.

Preda's classification anchors this type within Dacian and adjacent tribal territories, though precise attribution to a single group remains unresolved.

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