The Norican silver tetradrachms are among the most technically accomplished Celtic coinages of the Alpine region, produced by tribes who controlled strategically valuable iron ore deposits and maintained enough commercial infrastructure to sustain a coherent monetary tradition across generations. The Warasdin B classification within Kostial's typology reflects die-study groupings rather than findspot attribution — "Warasdin" refers to the broader stylistic family, not necessarily production at or near modern Varaždin.
East Noricum was absorbed into the Roman provincial system around 15 BC under Augustus, after which indigenous silver coinage production ceased almost entirely.
The Norican silver tetradrachms are among the most technically accomplished Celtic coinages of the Alpine region, produced by tribes who controlled strategically valuable iron ore deposits and maintained enough commercial infrastructure to sustain a coherent monetary tradition across generations. The Warasdin B classification within Kostial's typology reflects die-study groupings rather than findspot attribution — "Warasdin" refers to the broader stylistic family, not necessarily production at or near modern Varaždin.
East Noricum was absorbed into the Roman provincial system around 15 BC under Augustus, after which indigenous silver coinage production ceased almost entirely.