Lot

38

Tasciovanos Tascio Ricoin. Sills class 7c.c.25BC-AD10. Celtic gold stater. 17mm. 5.53g.

In Chris Rudd List 161

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Tasciovanos Tascio Ricoin. Sills class 7c.c.25BC-AD10. Celtic gold stater. 17mm. 5.53g. - Image 1 of 2
Tasciovanos Tascio Ricoin. Sills class 7c.c.25BC-AD10. Celtic gold stater. 17mm. 5.53g. - Image 2 of 2
Tasciovanos Tascio Ricoin. Sills class 7c.c.25BC-AD10. Celtic gold stater. 17mm. 5.53g. - Image 1 of 2
Tasciovanos Tascio Ricoin. Sills class 7c.c.25BC-AD10. Celtic gold stater. 17mm. 5.53g. - Image 2 of 2
Auctioneer has chosen not to publish the price of this lot
Aylsham, Norfolk

Tasciovanos Tascio Ricoin. Sills class 7c.c.25BC-AD10. Gold stater. 17mm. 5.53g. TASCI RICOIN in two panels on vertical wreath./ Cavalryman charging left, ring in front, ringed-pellet below. ABC−, VA−, BMC 1636, DK 516, S−. CCI 18.0440 (this coin). EF, sharply struck on neat flan of rose gold, every letter clear, bold horse. EXTREMELY RARE only seven others recorded, including two in museums.  

As we said over twenty years ago, this is Tasciovanos letting everyone know who is in charge in eastern Britain (ricon means ‘king’), a point worth making in uncertain times. If we could spy the ends of the four curved lines coming out of the royal box (the iron age equivalent of a 48-sheet poster or website) we might realise that each one is a stylised war trumpet (look closely at BMC 1630), a fitting ornament for a ruler in the process of blowing his own. Note too the heart-shaped hidden face beaming on the side of the two-line logo. This delightful device was later adopted by Cunobelinus on biga staters and quarters (ABC 2771, 2807). Dr John Sills says: “On class 7a the legend is given in its fullest form as TASCIOV RIGON (514), with Rigon seemingly a contraction of rigonos (Simkin, 2010, p.2-4). This could be the genitive of rigu, ‘king, lord’, a title with a specific meaning formed from rigu, or a lexicalized substantive – a word formed from constituent parts in order to express a new concept – perhaps, as Kretz has suggested, something along the lines of ‘supreme king’ or overlord (2000b, p.101)… RICOIN may well be a variant spelling rather than an engraver’s mistake, although its amendment back to RICON on obverses 52 to 55 suggests that this was the intended version” (DK, p.559-560). The first recorded RICOIN stater (BMC 1636) belonged to Sir John Evans and was found near Dunstable, Beds, in 1884. This is the third we’ve had and shows the legend variant very clearly.

Tasciovanos Tascio Ricoin. Sills class 7c.c.25BC-AD10. Gold stater. 17mm. 5.53g. TASCI RICOIN in two panels on vertical wreath./ Cavalryman charging left, ring in front, ringed-pellet below. ABC−, VA−, BMC 1636, DK 516, S−. CCI 18.0440 (this coin). EF, sharply struck on neat flan of rose gold, every letter clear, bold horse. EXTREMELY RARE only seven others recorded, including two in museums.  

As we said over twenty years ago, this is Tasciovanos letting everyone know who is in charge in eastern Britain (ricon means ‘king’), a point worth making in uncertain times. If we could spy the ends of the four curved lines coming out of the royal box (the iron age equivalent of a 48-sheet poster or website) we might realise that each one is a stylised war trumpet (look closely at BMC 1630), a fitting ornament for a ruler in the process of blowing his own. Note too the heart-shaped hidden face beaming on the side of the two-line logo. This delightful device was later adopted by Cunobelinus on biga staters and quarters (ABC 2771, 2807). Dr John Sills says: “On class 7a the legend is given in its fullest form as TASCIOV RIGON (514), with Rigon seemingly a contraction of rigonos (Simkin, 2010, p.2-4). This could be the genitive of rigu, ‘king, lord’, a title with a specific meaning formed from rigu, or a lexicalized substantive – a word formed from constituent parts in order to express a new concept – perhaps, as Kretz has suggested, something along the lines of ‘supreme king’ or overlord (2000b, p.101)… RICOIN may well be a variant spelling rather than an engraver’s mistake, although its amendment back to RICON on obverses 52 to 55 suggests that this was the intended version” (DK, p.559-560). The first recorded RICOIN stater (BMC 1636) belonged to Sir John Evans and was found near Dunstable, Beds, in 1884. This is the third we’ve had and shows the legend variant very clearly.

Chris Rudd List 161

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PO Box 222
Aylsham
Norfolk
NR11 6TY
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