Tulga came to the Visigothic throne as a teenager following the death of his father Chintila, and his reign lasted barely three years before Chindasuinth — then in his seventies — led a rebellion, deposed him, and had him tonsured and confined to a monastery. Toledo, the royal mint city named in this coin's legend, was the administrative and ecclesiastical center the Visigoths had held since displacing the Romans, and coins struck there carried particular political weight. Tremisses of Tulga are genuinely scarce; his abbreviated reign and the subsequent damnatio of his line kept mintage low.
Tulga came to the Visigothic throne as a teenager following the death of his father Chintila, and his reign lasted barely three years before Chindasuinth — then in his seventies — led a rebellion, deposed him, and had him tonsured and confined to a monastery. Toledo, the royal mint city named in this coin's legend, was the administrative and ecclesiastical center the Visigoths had held since displacing the Romans, and coins struck there carried particular political weight. Tremisses of Tulga are genuinely scarce; his abbreviated reign and the subsequent damnatio of his line kept mintage low.