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v25_0698 - CORIOSOLITÆ (Area of Corseul, Cotes d'Armor) “Petit billon” armoricain, en bronze

CORIOSOLITÆ (Area of Corseul, Cotes d Armor) “Petit billon” armoricain, en bronze VG/VF
MONNAIES 25 (2006)
Starting price : 100.00 €
Estimate : 250.00 €
unsold lot
Type : “Petit billon” armoricain, en bronze
Date: c. 80-50 AC.
Mint name / Town : Saint-Brieuc (22)
Metal : billon
Diameter : 12,8 mm
Weight : 0,57 g.
Rarity : R3
Coments on the condition:
Pour ce type de monnaies extrêmement mal représenté, cet exemplaire est de bonne qualité. Le droit est pourtant difficilement identifiable et le revers décentré mais néanmoins presque complet. Flan irrégulier et patine marron et granuleuse
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Tête humaine à droite.

Reverse


Reverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Reverse description : Cheval androcéphale (?) à droite, la crinière bouletée ; une rouelle perlée à sept rayons entre les jambes et un motif circulaire au-dessus du dos.

Commentary


Les seules monnaies qui correspondraient à peu près à ce “billon” ou bronze sont les n° 948-952 du musée de Rennes, repris dans le Nouvel Atlas (cf. n° 2372-2376).

Historical background


CORIOSOLITÆ (Area of Corseul, Cotes d'Armor)

(2nd - 1st century BC)

The Coriosolites were an Armorican people, settled in the current department of Côtes-d'Armor. They had for neighbors the Osismes, the Vénètes, the Namnètes and the Redons. They were a seafaring people whose main port seems to have been Alet. Their name is still preserved today in that of Corseul. They played an important role in trade with insular Britain, took part in the campaign of 57 BC and were subjugated by Crassus. The following year, they again participated in the revolt of the Armoricans under the leadership of the Veneti with the Unelles and the Lexoviens, all crushed by Caesar. In 52 BC, the Coriosolites participated in the contingent of twenty thousand men that the Armoricans sent to free Vercingetorix, besieged in Alesia. Caesar (BG. II, 34; III, 7, 11; VII, 75). Pliny (HN IV, 107) Kruta: 108, 355, 366.

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