Gold Gallo-Belgic Stater, Ambiani tribe, Picardy, 80-50 BC
The Winchester Coin Cabinet
Pierced silver penny of King Offa of Mercia by Lul, 792–96
Gold Angel of Charles I, London, 1641
Silver denarius by Lucius Hostilius Saserna, 48 BC
Gold aureus of Hadrian, Rome, 125-28
Gold Gallo-Belgic Stater, Ambiani tribe, Picardy, 80-50 BC
Copper halfpenny token, Robert Wright, Alfreton, 1668
Silver tetradrachm, Athens, 465-60 BC
Silver Shilling of Charles I, Pontefract Castle, 1648
Gold solidus of Constans II, Constantinople, 654-59
Silver penny of Harold II, Canterbury, 1066
Gold Fine sovereign of Mary I, London, 1553
White metal medal by Bennett of Sarum, c. 1860
Silver tetradrachm in the name of Alexander III, Macedonia, 275-70 BC
Silver denarius of Julius Caesar, Spain, 46-45 BC
The Ambiani tribe were a Belgic people who lived in the modern-day Picardy region. In 57 BC they united with other tribes to resist the Roman invasions led by Julius Caesar. Sometimes known as Gallic War staters, these types of coin are thought to have been made to finance the war in Gaul and perhaps pay for mercenaries.
This example is uniface, having a design on only one side, perhaps indicating that they were struck hastily under wartime conditions.