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bga_162478 - GALLIA BELGICA - BELLOVACI (Area of Beauvais) Bronze au coq, minimi imitation

GALLIA BELGICA - BELLOVACI (Area of Beauvais) Bronze au coq, minimi imitation VF
70.00 €(Approx. 72.80$ | 58.10£)
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Type : Bronze au coq, minimi imitation
Date: c. 50-25 AC.
Mint name / Town : Beauvais (60)
Metal : bronze
Diameter : 9 mm
Weight : 0,41 g.
Rarity : R3
Coments on the condition:
Monnaie frappée sur un tout petit flan irrégulier. Patine verte
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Tête casquée de Rome à droite ; derrière, X.

Reverse


Reverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Reverse description : Coq debout à droite, le corps formé d'une tête humaine barbue ; devant et derrière le coq, motif serpentiforme, centré d’un annelet.

Commentary


Ce type a parfois été mal classé et interprété. Le dessin du Lambert (pl. 7, n° 35) est repris dans le Traité de Numismatique gauloise d’A. Blanchet en 1905 (fig. 39). S. Scheers ne signalait pas qu’un exemplaire de ce type soit conservé au Cabinet des médailles en 1977 tandis que, trois ans plus tard dans son article (RN. 1980, p. 44), elle renvoyait au numéro 7227 pour ce type. Dans leur inventaire de 1889, Muret et Chabouillet n’avaient pas distingué le masque humain qui orne le poitrail du coq. Ce type est aujourd’hui mieux connu grâce aux travaux de L.-P. Delestrée.

Historical background


GALLIA BELGICA - BELLOVACI (Area of Beauvais)

(2nd - 1st century BC)

The Bellovaques, people of Belgian Gaul, occupied the current department of Oise. Their neighbors were the Parisii, the Véliocasses, the Calètes, the Ambiens and the Suessions.. Caesar (BG. VII. 59) considers the Bellovaci as the "most valiant people in all of Gaul". Before the Gallic Wars, the Bellovaci had been allies of the Aedui. In 57 BC. -VS. , they were the architects of the uprising of the Belgian peoples, provided a contingent of sixty thousand warriors to the coalition, but were defeated and found refuge on their oppidum of Bratuspantium. In 52 BC. -VS. , they had promised a contingent of ten thousand men for the relief army. They recanted, claiming to fight the Romans alone. Finally, at the prayer of Commius, they gave two thousand men to the coalition. The following year, in 51 BC. -VS. , they took for the last time the head of a revolt of the Belgian people. Corréos, Bellovaque chief, led the sedition in order to fight the Romans with the Atrébates, the Ambiens, the Aulerques Éburovices, the Calètes and the Véliocasses. With the atrebate Commios, Correos met the Roman armies on the borders of the Bellovaci and Suession countries.. Correos was killed, which put an end to hostilities definitively.. The main oppidum of the Bellovaci was Bratuspantium which is difficult to identify with certainty with the Roman city of Caesaromagus (Beauvais). Caesar. (BG. II, 4, 5, 10, 13, 14; V, 46; VII, 59, 75, 90; viii, 6, 7, 12, 14-17, 20-23, 38). Strabo (G. IV, 3-5). Pliny (HN. IV, 106). Ptolemy (G. II, 9). Kruta: 68, 351.

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