A new geophysical survey of the area where the Iron Age Le Câtillon hoard emerged may have found evidence of 2,000-year-old ...
It was a humbling moment. Another thought is that it might have been a communal burial of the coins by an Iron Age community, perhaps as an offering to the gods, or trying to ward off the Roman ...
Considered one of the most important ancient coins ever discovered, it was minted by renowned warlord of Iron Age Britain Caratacus - often held responsible for the Roman invasion of Britain.
Inscriptions on Iron Age coins are the first evidence of writing in Britain.This gold stater coin was one of 5294 British Iron Age and Roman coins excavated at a Late Iron Age shrine near Hallaton ...
These inscriptions suggest a growing level of literacy and familiarity with Latin. No Iron Age coins were produced in northern England, Wales, Scotland or Ireland. The settlements known as 'oppida ...