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Durogold (Lepe in DK, Westerham South in ABC).Durotriges.c.60-50 BC.Celtic gold stater. 18mm.6.23g.
Durogold (Lepe in DK, Westerham South in ABC). Sills British Af1, dies 2/12. c.60-50 BC. Gold stater. 18mm. 6.23g. Durotrigan wreath with upward-facing leaves./ Durotrigan disjointed horse left with ‘safety-pin’ head, three parallel up-slanted tail lines, pellets above, ‘coffee bean’ behind, large pellet below, zigzag exergual motif. ABC 482, VA 202, BMC 24-32, DK 295, S 21. CCI 98.0722 (this coin). Good VF, neat round flan of pale gold, heavyweight, both sides satisfyingly well centred, full horse fully displayed with all four legs. A delectable, well documented, Durotrigan gold stater, cherished for two decades by a discerning Celtic specialist. Ex RK collection. A SCARCE and numismatically significant type, 75 recorded including 13 in museums. This reverse die of the highest rarity and UNIQUE?
Changing names is a nuisance but often necessary – even desirable – in marriage and divorce. We think it’s high time that RK’s gorgeous gold stater – called Westerham South in 2010, renamed Lepe in 2017 – was finally separated from the Atrebates and Regini in the southern region and united with the Durotriges of Wessex where, according to Dr John Sills, it really belongs. To cement this long-overdue reunion we’ve renamed the stater Durogold. We believe that Durogold gold staters were the first regular staters issued by the Durotriges – the direct and immediate precursors to the earliest Cranborne Chase silver staters, ABC 2157. Indeed, except for their weight and colour, it’s almost impossible to tell the two apart, so closely wedded are they by design. Dr John Sills says: “Many late dies are indistinguishable from those used to strike early Durotrigan silver. It is likely that the same engraver worked for a time on both series” (DK, p.261). He also says: “The overall distribution of Af [Durogold staters and their quarters] is almost indistinguishable from that of the earliest ABC 2157 and 2205 base gold staters and quarters, and this is perhaps the strongest evidence that it stands at the head of the Durotrigan series” (DK, p.268). We think that Durogold staters were probably struck at Hengistbury Head, Dorset, by a Durotrigan king who wished to engage more fully with the fast-growing Gallo-British market in and around the Solent, a market boosted by the huge influx of rich Belgic refugees from the Gallic War, 58-51 BC. RK’s golden Durogold stater is published in Divided Kingdoms, p.294 (this coin).
Durogold (Lepe in DK, Westerham South in ABC). Sills British Af1, dies 2/12. c.60-50 BC. Gold stater. 18mm. 6.23g. Durotrigan wreath with upward-facing leaves./ Durotrigan disjointed horse left with ‘safety-pin’ head, three parallel up-slanted tail lines, pellets above, ‘coffee bean’ behind, large pellet below, zigzag exergual motif. ABC 482, VA 202, BMC 24-32, DK 295, S 21. CCI 98.0722 (this coin). Good VF, neat round flan of pale gold, heavyweight, both sides satisfyingly well centred, full horse fully displayed with all four legs. A delectable, well documented, Durotrigan gold stater, cherished for two decades by a discerning Celtic specialist. Ex RK collection. A SCARCE and numismatically significant type, 75 recorded including 13 in museums. This reverse die of the highest rarity and UNIQUE?
Changing names is a nuisance but often necessary – even desirable – in marriage and divorce. We think it’s high time that RK’s gorgeous gold stater – called Westerham South in 2010, renamed Lepe in 2017 – was finally separated from the Atrebates and Regini in the southern region and united with the Durotriges of Wessex where, according to Dr John Sills, it really belongs. To cement this long-overdue reunion we’ve renamed the stater Durogold. We believe that Durogold gold staters were the first regular staters issued by the Durotriges – the direct and immediate precursors to the earliest Cranborne Chase silver staters, ABC 2157. Indeed, except for their weight and colour, it’s almost impossible to tell the two apart, so closely wedded are they by design. Dr John Sills says: “Many late dies are indistinguishable from those used to strike early Durotrigan silver. It is likely that the same engraver worked for a time on both series” (DK, p.261). He also says: “The overall distribution of Af [Durogold staters and their quarters] is almost indistinguishable from that of the earliest ABC 2157 and 2205 base gold staters and quarters, and this is perhaps the strongest evidence that it stands at the head of the Durotrigan series” (DK, p.268). We think that Durogold staters were probably struck at Hengistbury Head, Dorset, by a Durotrigan king who wished to engage more fully with the fast-growing Gallo-British market in and around the Solent, a market boosted by the huge influx of rich Belgic refugees from the Gallic War, 58-51 BC. RK’s golden Durogold stater is published in Divided Kingdoms, p.294 (this coin).
Chris Rudd Auction 183
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