Lot

20

Bury Rider. Talbot −. Iceni. c.55-45 BC. Celtic silver unit. 14mm. 1.28g.

In Chris Rudd Auction 182

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Bury Rider. Talbot −. Iceni. c.55-45 BC. Celtic silver unit. 14mm. 1.28g. - Image 1 of 2
Bury Rider. Talbot −. Iceni. c.55-45 BC. Celtic silver unit. 14mm. 1.28g. - Image 2 of 2
Bury Rider. Talbot −. Iceni. c.55-45 BC. Celtic silver unit. 14mm. 1.28g. - Image 1 of 2
Bury Rider. Talbot −. Iceni. c.55-45 BC. Celtic silver unit. 14mm. 1.28g. - Image 2 of 2
Auctioneer has chosen not to publish the price of this lot
Norwich, Norfolk

Bury Rider. Talbot −. c.55-45 BC. Silver unit. 14mm. 1.28g. Helmeted head right, long pointed nose./ Long-eared horse left, beaded ringed-pellet and rings above, charioteer holding rein pole, quatrefoil in front, ringed-pellet below. ABC−, VA−, BMC−, COI 18 (this coin), S−. CCI 21.0196 (this coin). Good VF, bright silver, bold horse. Found Great Bromley, Essex. New type, of the highest rarity and possibly UNIQUE?           

Scholarly opinion is divided on the attribution on this important new type. Dr John Talbot, author of Made for Trade: A New View of Icenian Coinage (Oxbow 2017), believes that it is a North Thames issue, not Icenian. He notes there are “strong stylistic links…between Icenian East Anglia and the North Thames area.” He says: “I strongly suspect that this is the result of travelling moneyers taking suggested designs from one region to another and that his previously unknown coin is another example of that. We cannot be sure unless others are found, but I suspect that this is a very local North Thames silver unit” (pers.comm. 2.4.2021). Dr John Sills, author of Divided Kingdoms: The Iron Age gold coinage of southern England (Chris Rudd 2017), believes the coin is “stylistically pure Iceni” and “doesn’t fit within any of the North Thames series.” He too thinks that “in theory it could be the product of an itinerant engraver who moved to the North Thames region, but there were no other North Thames types that are obviously from the same hand or even similar. The only feature that suggests a North Thames origin is the findspot. If it was from Norfolk or Suffolk I don’t think we’d be in any doubt that it was Icenian” (pers.comm. 7.4.2021). On balance we think that this extraordinary coin – what other British coin has a charioteer with a rein pole? – is probably Icenian. Which is why we’ve named it Bury Rider and published it in Coins of the Iceni (Chris Rudd 2022), p.47 (this coin).

 

Bury Rider. Talbot −. c.55-45 BC. Silver unit. 14mm. 1.28g. Helmeted head right, long pointed nose./ Long-eared horse left, beaded ringed-pellet and rings above, charioteer holding rein pole, quatrefoil in front, ringed-pellet below. ABC−, VA−, BMC−, COI 18 (this coin), S−. CCI 21.0196 (this coin). Good VF, bright silver, bold horse. Found Great Bromley, Essex. New type, of the highest rarity and possibly UNIQUE?           

Scholarly opinion is divided on the attribution on this important new type. Dr John Talbot, author of Made for Trade: A New View of Icenian Coinage (Oxbow 2017), believes that it is a North Thames issue, not Icenian. He notes there are “strong stylistic links…between Icenian East Anglia and the North Thames area.” He says: “I strongly suspect that this is the result of travelling moneyers taking suggested designs from one region to another and that his previously unknown coin is another example of that. We cannot be sure unless others are found, but I suspect that this is a very local North Thames silver unit” (pers.comm. 2.4.2021). Dr John Sills, author of Divided Kingdoms: The Iron Age gold coinage of southern England (Chris Rudd 2017), believes the coin is “stylistically pure Iceni” and “doesn’t fit within any of the North Thames series.” He too thinks that “in theory it could be the product of an itinerant engraver who moved to the North Thames region, but there were no other North Thames types that are obviously from the same hand or even similar. The only feature that suggests a North Thames origin is the findspot. If it was from Norfolk or Suffolk I don’t think we’d be in any doubt that it was Icenian” (pers.comm. 7.4.2021). On balance we think that this extraordinary coin – what other British coin has a charioteer with a rein pole? – is probably Icenian. Which is why we’ve named it Bury Rider and published it in Coins of the Iceni (Chris Rudd 2022), p.47 (this coin).

 

Chris Rudd Auction 182

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