Cantiaci Dubnovellaunos c.25 BC-AD 5 Trefoil Gold Quarter Stater *Very Rare*

£1,250.00

Code: IAC28

Cantiaci Dubnovellaunos c.25 BC-AD 5 Trefoil Gold Quarter Stater

Plain with slight banding/Horse right with trefoil face above

Very Rare

ABC312; 11mm, 1.33g

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A pleasing example, Spink COE plate coin for many years.

Provenance

This coin is from The London Collection of Ancient British Coins. For more information click here: The London Collection – Silbury Coins : Silbury Coins.

SNC, Sept 1994, lot 5584, Seaby COE 1996- plate coin VA 170

This coin comes with a previous label.

 

Dubnovellaunos (25 BC – AD 5/10?)

Based on current evidence, it seems to be the case that Dubnovellaunos is the earliest individual to be named on Kentish coinage of the Late Iron Age. It has been suggested that he was the ‘Dumnobellaunos’ named in the 32nd passage of Augustus’ Res Gestae, although this is not certain. Other individuals named ‘Dumnovellaunos’ are present in the Late Iron Age coin series from other regions of Britain (e.g., the north-east), and indeed it may be a completely different individually totally unconnected with the issuance of these coins.

‘The following kings sought refuge with me as suppliants…Dumnobellaunus and Tincommius, kings of the Britons….’

 It has been hotly debated as to whether the Dubnovellaunos issuing coinage in Kent is the same as that who produced a relatively restricted, trimetallic series of coins whose distribution centres on Essex. As Kent and Essex share a land border, it is perfectly plausible from a geographic perspective to suggest that Dubnovellaunos may well have been a ruler in Kent who chose to extend his territory and influence northwards. It is certainly true that that the Kentish series of coins struck in his name are much more extensive than those found in Essex, which might suggest an origin in the former rather than the latter. Nevertheless, whatever his affiliation, Dubnovellaunos was out of the picture soon after the commencement of the 1st century AD – his territories potentially absorbed by Eppilus of the Atrebates and the much better-known Cunobelin of the Catavellaunii.

Coins of Dubnovellaunos struck in Kent are the most extensive of the inscribed series to be struck there, including some of the most iconic inscribed silver units in the entire Late Iron Age corpus. These include types such as the ‘Dubnovellaunos Pegasus’ (ABC 315/BMC 2443–44) and ‘Dubnovellaunos Metalworker’ (ABC 324/BMC 2502–3).

 

 

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