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bga_719410 - GALLIA - BITURIGES CUBI (Area of Bourges) Denier au rameau et à l’annelet pointé

GALLIA - BITURIGES CUBI (Area of Bourges) Denier au rameau et à l’annelet pointé AU
220.00 €(Approx. 228.80$ | 182.60£)
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Type : Denier au rameau et à l’annelet pointé
Date: c. 60-50 AC.
Mint name / Town : Bourges (18)
Metal : silver
Diameter : 13 mm
Orientation dies : 9 h.
Weight : 1,9 g.
Rarity : R2
Coments on the condition:
Monnaie bien centrée, avec de très jolis détails au droit comme au revers. Une belle patine grise
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Tête à gauche ; les cheveux disposés en trois mèches.

Reverse


Reverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Reverse description : Cheval sexué libre au pas à gauche ; au-dessus un rameau ; un annelet pointé entre les jambes.

Commentary


Ce denier correspond à la classe II du Type II du Nouvel Atlas, "à un seul annelet pointé".
Nous n’avons proposé que très peu d’exemplaires de cette variété ; la plupart des monnaies au rameau ont trois annelets. Les pointages du Numéraire Celtique listent 15 monnaies avec un seul annelet et 18 avec les trois annelets, mais ce pointage est erroné (l'exemplaire n° 394 de MONNAIES XV, avec trois annelets, y est par exemple considéré comme n’ayant qu’un annelet...).

Historical background


GALLIA - BITURIGES CUBI (Area of Bourges)

(2nd - 1st century BC)

The Bituriges Cubes were one of the most powerful peoples of the Celtic. Their territory extended over part of Bourbonnais, Touraine and Berry, the current departments of Cher, Indre and part of Allier. Their capital was the oppidum of Avaricum (Bourges). The Loire separated them from the Aedui and the Carnutes. They also had for neighbors the Pictons, the Lémovices and the Arvernes. According to the account of Livy, the king of Bituriges, Ambigat would have reigned over the whole of unified Gaul in the 6th century BC.. -VS. and would have sent his two nephews, Bellovèse and Sigovèse, one to Italy, the other to the East, to found the Gallic Empire which, a century later, extended over Great Britain, central Europe (except Switzerland), northern Italy and most of the Danube. Before the Gallic Wars, the Bituriges would have been the clients of the Aedui and a contingent of Boii would have been installed on their territory.. Their main wealth came from animal husbandry and iron mining which had brought them wealth and prosperity.. In 52 BC. -VS. , they supported Vercingetorix. They were defeated at Genabum (Orleans) by Caesar. Vercingetorix encouraged them to practice the scorched earth technique. They thus destroyed more than twenty oppida, but refused the same fate to their capital, Avaricum (Bourges). Caesar came to besiege the oppidum, defended by thirty thousand Bituriges and ten thousand allies. The city was taken and burned, only eight hundred soldiers were able to escape, while the garrison and the population were massacred.. Caesar found there abundant reserves which enabled him to spend the winter and prepare the campaign for the following spring.. Nevertheless, the Bituriges would still have provided a contingent of twelve thousand men to the relief army of the Gallic coalition, during the siege of Alésia. At the beginning of 51 BC. -VS. , Caesar led a new campaign among the Bituriges who submitted very quickly. A few weeks later, they intervened with Caesar to fight against the Carnutes. Caesar (BG. I, 18; VII, 5, 8, 9, 11-13, 15, 21, 29, 75, 90, VIII, 2, 3, 4, 11). Strabo (G. IV, 2). Livy (HR. V, 34, 35). Pliny (HN. , IV. 109). Ptolemy (G. II, 7). Kruta: 68-70, 145, 186-187, 212-213, 240, 334, 344, 360.

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