I chose this one because it looks like the kid is trying to pull back. Constans (AD 337-350). AE centenionalias, Alexandria mint. 4.80g, 20mm. Struck AD 348-350. Obv: D N CONSTANS P F AVG; Pearl-diademed, draped and cuirassed bust left, holding globe in right hand Rev: FEL TEMP REPARATIO; ALEG; Soldier dragging young barbarian from hut Ref: RIC VIII 58; LRBC 2818
Lugdunum has two primary types Three branches made up of a single large leaf five branches with oval leaves (with stripes across them horizontally)
Siscia Multiple branches, three leaves on each three horizontal branches, each with a large single leaf
Thessalonica Three major branches with what appear to be fruit rather than leaves with some small bare branches Three branches with single leaves
That last hut is very interesting. The die engraver seems to have gone a little further in trying to represent the actual hut in three dimensions, or at least the beginning of the right half of the hut. Unless I’m seeing things.
As I've noted ad nauseum elsewhere, I think early ms. illustrations such as the Roman Vergil can offer some underutilized and near-contemporary companion pieces to numismatic iconography. What was the die engraver seeing in his mind when carving those huts on the die? Probably the kinds of structures represented in these pictures. I wonder what that item is that seems to hang down from the center of the hut's opening? Looks like a bag on a rope.
Where did the style of the hut originate? Hut coin? Manuscript? Were both copied from another original from an earlier period? Manuscripts of Vergil don't have to date to his era. Do we know when that one was drawn?
I’m not as familiar with the so-called Roman Vergil, from which these images come. But a similar ms., the Vatican Vergil, was conventionally thought to date from the mid-fifth century, but more recent scholarship has dated the VV to ca. 400, if not the late 4th c. I think the Roman Vergil might be similarly dated. Clearly the mss. come about 25-50 years after the coins, but I’d suggest they share a common understanding of what a rustic hut should look like.
BTW, I just won this Aquileia example for $10.50 shipped from Victor Clark’s eBay listings about 15 minutes ago. I liked the details on the smaller figure’s clothing. Victor’s photo: