Ancient British barbarous Constantinian GLORIA EXERCITVS AE3, minted ca.330-348 AD - high quality imitation of the continental type from Dorchester (?) in Roman Britain

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Crude unreadable inscriptions, Bust of Constantine II (or another son of Constantine) facing right / Crude GLORIA EXERCITVS, Two soldiers, each holding a labarus and a spear, TRZ* below. 17mm, 1.59 grams. Imitaiting Trier mint, but struck in Britain, ca.330-348 AD

There were a few series of fascinating high quality imitations of VRBS ROMA, CONSTANTINOPOLIS and GLORIA EXERCITVS bronzes produced in Britain in the later 330's-340's AD. The coins were of unusually high quality for British imitations - these were, by far, the nicest of the Romano-British Constantinian barbarics. They might have been semi-official coins, struck because of the acute coin shortage by the local government. All these imitative coins bore mintmarks of Lyons, Trier and (to a lesser extent) Rome, but there produced somewhere in Southern Britain. Dr.Adrian Marsden, in his excellent article about these coins published some 2 decades ago, identified the possible production sites for these coins. I think they were minted in Nether Compton, outside of the Roman Dorchester and perhaps at other locations. 


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