The treasure includes more than 5,000 silver and gold coins. Experts estimate that most of the coins date from around 50 BC to slightly beyond the Roman conquest. However there are over 300 Roman coins which date to later activity at the site, right up to the 4th century AD. The treasure also includes the oldest Roman coin ever found in Britain.
Highlights
Gold quarter stater, Trinovantes, Cunobelin, around AD 10-40
Gold quarter stater, Trinovantes, Cunobelin, around AD 10-40
Many British Iron Age coins feature horses. The various tribes depicted horses in very different ways. This Trinovantes horse is more naturalistic than the disjointed horses shown on Corieltavian coins.
Gold Quarter Stater Trinovantes Uninscribed Around 50 20 BC, showing a different horse design
Silver half unit, Corieltavi, Volisios Dumnocoveros, around AD 30-60
Only a few coins of this type were found at Hallaton. This type of coin is usually found more widely in the northern Corieltavi area, in northern Lincolnshire and southern Yorkshire.
In 2022 Design Futures Group captured a high-quality 3D scan of a Corieltavian gold stater, which you can interact with below.