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v15_1373 - HELVETII (Currently Switzerland) Quart de statère, au triskèle

HELVETII (Currently Switzerland) Quart de statère, au triskèle VF
MONNAIES 15 (2002)
Starting price : 335.00 €
Estimate : 750.00 €
unsold lot
Type : Quart de statère, au triskèle
Date: c. 150-80 AC.
Metal : gold
Diameter : 10,5 mm
Orientation dies : 11 h.
Weight : 1,97 g.
Rarity : R3
Coments on the condition:
Monnaie de fabrication très grossière, frappée sur un flan irrégulier et épais
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Tête stylisée à gauche, d’un traitement angulaire.

Reverse


Reverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Reverse description : Cheval bridé à gauche, la roue du char derrière lui surmontée d’un bige filiforme semblant presque allongé avec les bras en avant.

Commentary


Ces quarts de statères sont très rares et particulièrement mal connus. Cet exemplaire semble être de même coin de revers (et peut-être de droit) que l’exemplaire du Musée de Besancon, reproduit dans la RSN. 53, 1974, page 62, pl. 13, n° 127. Exemplaire d’un poids lourd, qui donnerait un statère de 7,88 grammes.

Historical background


HELVETII (Currently Switzerland)

(3rd - 1st century BC)

The Helvetians occupied the territory of present-day Switzerland. Their neighbors were the Séquanes and the Allobroges. According to Pliny's account, it was Helicon, a Helvetian, who would have made wine known to the Gauls, which would have pushed them to invade Italy in the 4th century BC.. -VS. The Helvetians were divided into four pagi including the Tigurins and the Verbigenins. In 58 BC. -VS. , according to Caesar, their territory included forty-two strongholds and four hundred villages. They are at the origin of the intervention of the Roman armies in Gaul. Indeed, pushed by the Germans, they would have decided to emigrate towards the West towards the country of Santons, by crossing the territory of Séquanes, Lingons and Aedui. The latter appealed to Caesar to defend them in the name of the friendship that bound them to the Romans.. The Helvetians, to be sure not to return, destroyed their villages, their houses and their crops.. Defeated near Bibracte, the survivors were forced to return to their home territory. The Helvetians provided a contingent of eight thousand men for the relief army. Caesar (BG. I; IV, 10; VI, 25; VII, 75). Kruta: 16, 44, 51, 71, 94, 244, 310, 312, 338, 350, 352-353, 359, 362, 364.

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