Lot

7

Eppillus Margate Plain. Cantiaci. c.AD 1-15. Celtic gold quarter stater. 14mm. 1.21g.

In Chris Rudd Auction 197

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Eppillus Margate Plain. Cantiaci. c.AD 1-15. Celtic gold quarter stater. 14mm. 1.21g. - Image 1 of 2
Eppillus Margate Plain. Cantiaci. c.AD 1-15. Celtic gold quarter stater. 14mm. 1.21g. - Image 2 of 2
Eppillus Margate Plain. Cantiaci. c.AD 1-15. Celtic gold quarter stater. 14mm. 1.21g. - Image 1 of 2
Eppillus Margate Plain. Cantiaci. c.AD 1-15. Celtic gold quarter stater. 14mm. 1.21g. - Image 2 of 2
Auctioneer has chosen not to publish the price of this lot
Norwich, Norfolk

Eppillus Margate Plain. Sills class 1b. c.AD 1-15. Gold quarter stater. 14mm. 1.21g. COMF on plain field./ Horse right, EPPI above, cruciform flower motif below, beaded border. ABC−, VA−, BMC−, DK 115, S−. PAS: KENT-95BF6C (this coin). Good VF, rich golden gold, heavyweight, bold horse, sharp inscription. Found Ripple, Kent, 2 March 2022. EXCESSIVELY RARE only two others recorded. 

One of the rarest inscribed quarter staters in the British series, named after the specimen in the collection of Sir John Evans, which was found near Margate, Kent, 1853 (Num.Chron. 16, p.80, no.13) – and what a difference it makes to have a coin struck when the dies were fresh (contrast DK 115 when they were worn and clogging). Now we see exactly what was intended: the sturdy “Little Horse’s” neatly beaded mane, and the same pellets at the centre and between the petals of the flower emblem as it had before, in ABC 393. This was the last in Eppillus’ first series of Cantian quarter staters, and the examples we have so far suggest intensive activity at his mint just before Anarevito’s coinage appears in tandem with the last of his father’s, and at just the point when an ambitious young Cunobelin’s gold coinage also first appears in Kent. Was there a crisis in Eppillus’ Cantian realm, as Cunobelin challenged his control of the best harbours and seaways between the Folkestone/Dover area and the ageing Augustus’ markets in Gaul (see notes on Lot 8)? Is that why Eppillus promoted a trusted son as a district chief and heir, whilst inscribing his own last quarter staters (ABC 396) with the title REX, just to clarify which of them actually held the all-important treaty with Rome? It is only well recorded finds such as these that help us piece such a narrative together.

Eppillus Margate Plain. Sills class 1b. c.AD 1-15. Gold quarter stater. 14mm. 1.21g. COMF on plain field./ Horse right, EPPI above, cruciform flower motif below, beaded border. ABC−, VA−, BMC−, DK 115, S−. PAS: KENT-95BF6C (this coin). Good VF, rich golden gold, heavyweight, bold horse, sharp inscription. Found Ripple, Kent, 2 March 2022. EXCESSIVELY RARE only two others recorded. 

One of the rarest inscribed quarter staters in the British series, named after the specimen in the collection of Sir John Evans, which was found near Margate, Kent, 1853 (Num.Chron. 16, p.80, no.13) – and what a difference it makes to have a coin struck when the dies were fresh (contrast DK 115 when they were worn and clogging). Now we see exactly what was intended: the sturdy “Little Horse’s” neatly beaded mane, and the same pellets at the centre and between the petals of the flower emblem as it had before, in ABC 393. This was the last in Eppillus’ first series of Cantian quarter staters, and the examples we have so far suggest intensive activity at his mint just before Anarevito’s coinage appears in tandem with the last of his father’s, and at just the point when an ambitious young Cunobelin’s gold coinage also first appears in Kent. Was there a crisis in Eppillus’ Cantian realm, as Cunobelin challenged his control of the best harbours and seaways between the Folkestone/Dover area and the ageing Augustus’ markets in Gaul (see notes on Lot 8)? Is that why Eppillus promoted a trusted son as a district chief and heir, whilst inscribing his own last quarter staters (ABC 396) with the title REX, just to clarify which of them actually held the all-important treaty with Rome? It is only well recorded finds such as these that help us piece such a narrative together.

Chris Rudd Auction 197

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Tags: Celtic, US, Stater, Coin, Quarter Stater