Romano-British Antoninianus

Dublin Core

Title

Romano-British Antoninianus

Subject

BRONZE

Description

Obv: Head, radiate.
Rev: Indistinguishable.

A crude imitation of the official Roman antoninianus. Such coins are usually called "barbarous radiates". In Britain most of the Roman imperial coinage between A.D. 258 and 296 was copied. Generally, the worse the imitation, the later it should be dated: most of the later imitations were copied not from the official coinage, but from copies themselves. The most compelling reason for the striking of  barbarous radiates was the need for small change, in which the official coinage was sadly lacking. The subject is thoroughly discussed by P.V. Hill in CRB, Appendix II, pp. 83-86.

Creator

England

Source

Purchased from BA Seaby Ltd, London, 1976.

Date

AD 275 - AD 300

Identifier

C.159

Coverage

Italic
Roman
Late Antique

Files

c.159.2.jpg

Citation

England, “Romano-British Antoninianus,” RD Milns Antiquities Museum Online Exhibitions, accessed May 4, 2024, https://uqantiquitiesonlineexhibitions.omeka.net/items/show/365.