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<p>[QUOTE="Al Kowsky, post: 4562216, member: 97383"]Philip II of Macedon would hire Celtic mercenaries to aid in his military campaigns, and would often pay these warriors with gold staters struck at a variety of different mints. These staters had a laureate head of Apollo on the obverse, and a charioteer driving a biga while holding a kentron on the reverse. The coins contained on average 8.60 gm of pure gold and circulated throughout Celtic Europe; they were also imported into Britain. Celtic craftsmen soon began making their own staters, half, and quarter staters using the Macedonian staters as a template. The Celtic coins soon devolved in style becoming very abstract and truly Celtic in appearance. Different tribes developed their own styles creating some beautiful coins. Many numismatists believe the oldest form of abstract art are the Gallo-Belgic coins of Celtic Europe and Britain. Modern artists like Pablo Picasso and Joan Miro admired and were influenced by Celtic coins.</p><p><br /></p><p>There is something magical or mystical about these coins that is hard to put your finger on. When I see a bizarre looking Celtic coin I envision strange looking people and remember reading about Queen Boudica, Cunobelin, Vercingetorix, and Commius.</p><p>I had been looking for a high-grade Celtic coin from Britain that wouldn't send me to the "poor house" and finally scored the coin pictured below. The coin was slabbed by NGC and came with two sale tickets from Chris Rudd. It was issued under the authority of King Commius, leader of the Atrebates tribe, who was at one time an ally of Julius Caesar. Commius helped Caesar during the Gaulish revolts of 54 BC, and in return Caesar gave the Atrebates independence and exemption from taxation. The friendship unraveled and Caesar attempted to assassinate Commius. In 52 BC Commius leading the Atrebates, joined forces with Vercingetorix against Caesar at the siege of Alesia. Caesar was victorious and Vercingetorix was captured, but Commius managed to escape. Commius continued to harass the troops of Caesar with guerrilla warfare until Mark Antony negotiated a truce between them. In 50 BC Commius was allowed to return to Britain, and was recognized as friendly king to Caesar, as long as no Romans were allowed on his territory. Commius was the first man to put his name on a British coin.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1129316[/ATTACH] <b>Celtic, Atrebates & Regni. </b><i><b>Commius.</b></i> Circa 50-25 BC. AV Stater: 5.42 gm, 17 mm, 7 h. Struck 30-25 BC, Southern mint in Britain. Commios Muzzles (Atrebatic C) type. Obverse: Devolved head of Apollo facing right, with two "hidden face" motifs. Reverse: Celtic horse facing right, with remains of of charioteer's arm above, and chariot wheel below.Van Arsdell 350-1; Bean COM 1-3; ABC 1022; SCBC 65. NGC 4166914-004, graded AU, Strike 5/5, Surface 4/5. <i>Ex Rudd FPL 137, #11 (Sept. 2014), Rudd FPL 89, #19, (Sept. 2006).</i></p><p><i><br /></i></p><p><i>[ATTACH=full]1129317[/ATTACH] </i></p><p><i><br /></i></p><p>Nearly all the coins of of this type were struck on thick flans of undersized diameters. When the coins were perfectly centered the word Commius couldn't be seen. If the coins were struck off-center in the right direction the name could be seen. Pictured below is the reverse of my coin next to a coin that is off-center. A trace of the name can be seen on the lower portion of the 2nd coin.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1129318[/ATTACH]</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1129319[/ATTACH]</p><p>Map of Southern Britain showing locations of Celtic tribes. Photo courtesy of Chris Rudd.</p><p><br /></p><p>Pictured below is a Macedonian stater of Philip II, followed by 5 Celtic staters made by different tribes showing different levels of abstraction.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1129321[/ATTACH]</p><p><b>Macedon, Philip II, 359-336 BC, AV Stater: 8.59 gm, 18 mm. </b>Obverse: Laureate head of Apollo facing right. Reverse: Charioteer in biga holding kentron, trident below. Photo courtesy of CNG.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1129327[/ATTACH]</p><p><b>Gaul, Gironde Region, Late 3rd - Early 2nd Century BC, AV Stater: 8.57 gm, 21 mm. </b>This is a very rare early Celtic copy of a Philip II stater. Photo courtesy of Heritage Auctions.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1129328[/ATTACH]</p><p><b>Gaul, Redones Tribe of Brittany, 2nd Century BC. </b>The chariot has been replaced by a nude female riding a horse, with a thunderbolt below. Is this a Celtic goddess or a female warrior ? Photo courtesy of Goldberg Auctions.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1129329[/ATTACH]</p><p><b>Central Gaul, Limovices Tribe, Late 2nd - Early 1st Century BC. Electrum Stater: 6.59 gm, 17 mm. </b>Apollo's head is more devolved and spirals are emanating from his mouth. A bird is riding on the back of this Celtic horse. Photo courtesy of Leu Numismatik AG.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1129331[/ATTACH] <b>Gaul, Parisii Tribe, Circa 100 - 50 BC, AV Stater: 7.36 gm, 22 mm. </b>Apollo's head and the Celtic horse are showing greater abstraction. Above the horse is a star canopy and below the chariot wheel now resembles a five-petal flower. The city of Paris is named after the Parisii tribe who lived in that area. Photo courtesy of Heritage Auctions.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1129332[/ATTACH]</p><p><b>Gallo-Belgic, Ambiani Tribe, Circa 80 - 70 BC, AV Stater: 6.45 gm, 18 mm. </b>Now we can see extreme abstraction. Apollo's profile is barely discernible and the Celtic horse more devolved. Photo courtesy of A.H. Baldwin & Sons Ltd.</p><p><br /></p><p>References:</p><p>Wikipedia</p><p>Celtic Coinage of Britain, 3rd Edition, Van ArsDell</p><p>Celtic Coin Index, Van Arsdell</p><p>Article from The Old Currency Exchange: <i>The</i> <i>Enigmatic Coinage from the Celtic Tribes of Britain / 3-31-2015</i></p><p>Coin Week Article by Mark Markowitz: <i>The Celtic Coinage of Gaul / 1-3-2019</i></p><p><i><br /></i></p><p><b>CT </b>members are welcome to post their favorite Celtic coins on this thread <img src="styles/default/xenforo/clear.png" class="mceSmilieSprite mceSmilie8" alt=":D" unselectable="on" unselectable="on" />.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Al Kowsky, post: 4562216, member: 97383"]Philip II of Macedon would hire Celtic mercenaries to aid in his military campaigns, and would often pay these warriors with gold staters struck at a variety of different mints. These staters had a laureate head of Apollo on the obverse, and a charioteer driving a biga while holding a kentron on the reverse. The coins contained on average 8.60 gm of pure gold and circulated throughout Celtic Europe; they were also imported into Britain. Celtic craftsmen soon began making their own staters, half, and quarter staters using the Macedonian staters as a template. The Celtic coins soon devolved in style becoming very abstract and truly Celtic in appearance. Different tribes developed their own styles creating some beautiful coins. Many numismatists believe the oldest form of abstract art are the Gallo-Belgic coins of Celtic Europe and Britain. Modern artists like Pablo Picasso and Joan Miro admired and were influenced by Celtic coins. There is something magical or mystical about these coins that is hard to put your finger on. When I see a bizarre looking Celtic coin I envision strange looking people and remember reading about Queen Boudica, Cunobelin, Vercingetorix, and Commius. I had been looking for a high-grade Celtic coin from Britain that wouldn't send me to the "poor house" and finally scored the coin pictured below. The coin was slabbed by NGC and came with two sale tickets from Chris Rudd. It was issued under the authority of King Commius, leader of the Atrebates tribe, who was at one time an ally of Julius Caesar. Commius helped Caesar during the Gaulish revolts of 54 BC, and in return Caesar gave the Atrebates independence and exemption from taxation. The friendship unraveled and Caesar attempted to assassinate Commius. In 52 BC Commius leading the Atrebates, joined forces with Vercingetorix against Caesar at the siege of Alesia. Caesar was victorious and Vercingetorix was captured, but Commius managed to escape. Commius continued to harass the troops of Caesar with guerrilla warfare until Mark Antony negotiated a truce between them. In 50 BC Commius was allowed to return to Britain, and was recognized as friendly king to Caesar, as long as no Romans were allowed on his territory. Commius was the first man to put his name on a British coin. [ATTACH=full]1129316[/ATTACH] [B]Celtic, Atrebates & Regni. [/B][I][B]Commius.[/B][/I] Circa 50-25 BC. AV Stater: 5.42 gm, 17 mm, 7 h. Struck 30-25 BC, Southern mint in Britain. Commios Muzzles (Atrebatic C) type. Obverse: Devolved head of Apollo facing right, with two "hidden face" motifs. Reverse: Celtic horse facing right, with remains of of charioteer's arm above, and chariot wheel below.Van Arsdell 350-1; Bean COM 1-3; ABC 1022; SCBC 65. NGC 4166914-004, graded AU, Strike 5/5, Surface 4/5. [I]Ex Rudd FPL 137, #11 (Sept. 2014), Rudd FPL 89, #19, (Sept. 2006). [ATTACH=full]1129317[/ATTACH] [/I] Nearly all the coins of of this type were struck on thick flans of undersized diameters. When the coins were perfectly centered the word Commius couldn't be seen. If the coins were struck off-center in the right direction the name could be seen. Pictured below is the reverse of my coin next to a coin that is off-center. A trace of the name can be seen on the lower portion of the 2nd coin. [ATTACH=full]1129318[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=full]1129319[/ATTACH] Map of Southern Britain showing locations of Celtic tribes. Photo courtesy of Chris Rudd. Pictured below is a Macedonian stater of Philip II, followed by 5 Celtic staters made by different tribes showing different levels of abstraction. [ATTACH=full]1129321[/ATTACH] [B]Macedon, Philip II, 359-336 BC, AV Stater: 8.59 gm, 18 mm. [/B]Obverse: Laureate head of Apollo facing right. Reverse: Charioteer in biga holding kentron, trident below. Photo courtesy of CNG. [ATTACH=full]1129327[/ATTACH] [B]Gaul, Gironde Region, Late 3rd - Early 2nd Century BC, AV Stater: 8.57 gm, 21 mm. [/B]This is a very rare early Celtic copy of a Philip II stater. Photo courtesy of Heritage Auctions. [ATTACH=full]1129328[/ATTACH] [B]Gaul, Redones Tribe of Brittany, 2nd Century BC. [/B]The chariot has been replaced by a nude female riding a horse, with a thunderbolt below. Is this a Celtic goddess or a female warrior ? Photo courtesy of Goldberg Auctions. [ATTACH=full]1129329[/ATTACH] [B]Central Gaul, Limovices Tribe, Late 2nd - Early 1st Century BC. Electrum Stater: 6.59 gm, 17 mm. [/B]Apollo's head is more devolved and spirals are emanating from his mouth. A bird is riding on the back of this Celtic horse. Photo courtesy of Leu Numismatik AG. [ATTACH=full]1129331[/ATTACH] [B]Gaul, Parisii Tribe, Circa 100 - 50 BC, AV Stater: 7.36 gm, 22 mm. [/B]Apollo's head and the Celtic horse are showing greater abstraction. Above the horse is a star canopy and below the chariot wheel now resembles a five-petal flower. The city of Paris is named after the Parisii tribe who lived in that area. Photo courtesy of Heritage Auctions. [ATTACH=full]1129332[/ATTACH] [B]Gallo-Belgic, Ambiani Tribe, Circa 80 - 70 BC, AV Stater: 6.45 gm, 18 mm. [/B]Now we can see extreme abstraction. Apollo's profile is barely discernible and the Celtic horse more devolved. Photo courtesy of A.H. Baldwin & Sons Ltd. References: Wikipedia Celtic Coinage of Britain, 3rd Edition, Van ArsDell Celtic Coin Index, Van Arsdell Article from The Old Currency Exchange: [I]The[/I] [I]Enigmatic Coinage from the Celtic Tribes of Britain / 3-31-2015[/I] Coin Week Article by Mark Markowitz: [I]The Celtic Coinage of Gaul / 1-3-2019 [/I] [B]CT [/B]members are welcome to post their favorite Celtic coins on this thread :D.[/QUOTE]
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