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Unit

Issuer Iltirta (Ilergetes people)
Year 125 BC - 72 BC
Type Standard circulation coin
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Reverse description A horseman galloping vigorously to the right, clad in a chlamys billowing behind him; he raises a palm branch in his extended right hand, a symbol of victory. The horse is depicted in a dynamic, rearing pose with pronounced musculature. An Iberian legend in the Levantine semi-syllabic script appears in the exergue, identifying the issuing mint of Iltirta. The composition closely follows Iberian denarius prototypes, combining Hellenistic equestrian imagery with indigenous epigraphic conventions.
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Reverse lettering iltir-ta
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Additional information

The Ilergetes were the most powerful of the Iberian tribal confederacies in the northeastern peninsula, and their political weight is reflected in the longevity of this coinage — a production run spanning over five decades. Their kings Indibilis and Mandonius had allied with Carthage during the Second Punic War, then switched to Rome when the calculus shifted, a pragmatism that bought the people a generation of relative autonomy. Iltirta, their principal settlement near modern Lleida, operated one of the most prolific indigenous mints in Hispania Citerior.

The series referenced by ACIP 1256 belongs to a later phase of production, after Roman administrative consolidation had begun forcing Iberian mints toward standardized weight norms. The terminus of 72 BC is not arbitrary — it coincides with Sertorius's defeat and the subsequent suppression of the last organized resistance in the region under Pompey.

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