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Tremissis in the name of Valentinian III, with panels

Issuer Suebi Kingdom
Year 425-455
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Value 1 Tremissis
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Reverse description Two crossed torques or staffs with knotted terminals forming an X-pattern across the field, enclosing a central wreath within which a Greek cross is displayed. A six-pointed star appears in the upper field above the crossing point. The mint signature CONOB is inscribed in the exergue in large, widely-spaced letters. The overall composition is a barbarous imitation of late Roman tremissis reverse types, rendered with bold, schematic lines characteristic of Suebi coinage.
Reverse script Latin
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Additional information

The Suebi established themselves in northwestern Iberia following the collapse of Roman frontier control in 409 AD, and for decades their kings issued coinage that mimicked imperial types — a deliberate political statement that they governed as legitimate heirs to Roman administrative order, not as conquerors. Valentinian III, who reigned from Ravenna as a child emperor under his mother's regency, was the model of choice precisely because his distant weakness made the imitation diplomatically costless.

The "panels" variety, catalogued at MEC I 286–287, represents a local workshop adaptation detectable through die analysis rather than any official mint distinction.

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