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Unit

Issuer Kaiskata
Year 150 BC - 101 BC
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Weight 11.9 g
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Obverse script Iberian (Celtiberian)
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Reverse script Iberian (Celtiberian)
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Additional information

Kaiskata was an Iberian settlement in the Ebro valley — identified by most scholars with the site near modern Cascante in Navarre — that began striking bronze coinage in the second century BC under the administrative framework the Romans imposed on Hispania Citerior after 197 BC. These issues were part of a broader monetization of indigenous communities, with Rome encouraging local mints to produce fractional bronze that could circulate alongside Roman Republican issues without directly competing with them.

The series is well-documented across the major Iberian corpus references, with ACIP 1682 placing it firmly in the mid-to-late second century production window.

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