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bga_185609 - GALLIA - SOUTH WESTERN GAUL - VOLCÆ TECTOSAGES (Area of Toulouse) Drachme uniface, indéterminée

GALLIA - SOUTH WESTERN GAUL - VOLCÆ TECTOSAGES (Area of Toulouse) Drachme uniface, indéterminée F
Not available.
Item sold on our e-shop (2009)
Price : 35.00 €
Type : Drachme uniface, indéterminée
Date: IIe siècle av. J.-C
Metal : silver
Diameter : 15,5 mm
Weight : 3,52 g.
Rarity : R1
Coments on the condition:
Cette monnaie est frappée avec des coins très usés. Fine patine grise avec des zones plus sombres
Catalogue references :
Predigree :
Cette drachme provient de la collection personnelle de G. Savès, spécialiste de référence pour les monnaies à la croix

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Lisse.

Reverse


Reverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Reverse description : Croix formée de quatre cantons ornés chacun d'une lunule.

Commentary


Cet exemplaire n’a pas été frappé avec un coin “lisse”, comme pour les monnaies bga_185593-185606, mais plutôt avec un coin très usé ; on devine à peine le silhouette de la tête cubiste à gauche. Le revers étant lui aussi frappé avec un coin usé, il est très difficile de rapprocher cette drachme d’une quelconque monnaie du Savès.
S on devine une balle de fonde aux 1er et 2e cantons, il semble y avoir un gros globule surmonté d’un segment parallèle au bras gauche de la croix, au 3e canton (?).

Historical background


GALLIA - SOUTH WESTERN GAUL - VOLCÆ TECTOSAGES (Area of Toulouse)

(2nd - 1st century BC)

The people of the Volques Tectosages (people who seek a roof) are one of the three main components of the Galatians who ravaged Greece and Asia Minor between 281 and 277 BC. -VS. Legend has it that the Volques Tectosages who migrated to Languedoc participated in the sack of Delphi and seized part of the treasures of the temple of Apollo at Delphi (at the origin of the gold of the Tectosages "aurum Tolosanum" ) and transported it to Tolosates (Vieille-Toulouse), their capital. In fact, the Volques Tectosages would come from Bohemia and would have emigrated during the 3rd century AD.. They nevertheless took part in the Danubian expeditions which led the Celts to the coasts of the Aegean, the Bosphorus and the Black Sea.. Mercenaries, they served the Carthaginians during the Punic Wars and were perhaps at the origin of the revolt of the mercenaries which almost took the Phoenician colony. From the Danube, they passed into Cisalpine Gaul (Italy) where they enlisted as mercenaries and are better known under the name of Gesates before passing into Gaul and settling in the South-West, in Aquitaine. The Volques Tectosages were certainly the most powerful people of Aquitaine. Quintus Servilius Cæpio who crushed the Volque coalition in 105 BC. -VS. would have seized "the gold of Toulouse", fruit of the plundering of the temple of Apollo of Delphi that the Tectosages would have repatriated with them before installing it in Tolosa. To have seized this treasure, he would then have known only misfortune! Sources: Cicero (Pro Fonteio 12), Caesar (BG. VI, 24), Strabo (G. IV, 1 and 13), Pliny (HN. III, 33), Ptolemy (G. II, 10), Kruta (71-72, 250-251, 253, 262, 265, 268, 275, 302-304, 306-307, 309-310, 323, 338, 343, 349, 376, 763, 865 ).

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