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SE23 Forest Hill



Coin; gold stater, Gallo-Belgic C

Cross-Channel coins


This Iron Age gold coin was found in Forest Hill. It was known as a 'stater'. One side shows the god Apollo wearing a wreath. The other side has a disjointed horse. There are also pellets, curved ornaments and an eye ornament (or chariot wheel) behind. This is a stylised picture of a horse and chariot.

Who made it?

These coins were made in north-eastern France. They are associated with a tribe, the Ambiani, who lived around modern Amiens. The coins may have been brought to Britain at times of unrest in France or by traders. British mercenaries fighting for the French tribes against the Romans could have brought the coins back as payment.

The first coins

Gold staters are amongst the earliest coins imported into Britain. Eventually many British tribes and rulers struck their own coins of bronze and silver. Iron Age coins help to identify the areas in which tribes lived and traded. They also tell us about tribal rivalries.


Museum number A27340/1

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Adjacent postcodes


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SE15
'Dulwich Picture Gallery' by Joseph Michael Gandy
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Stoneware jar
SE22
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Handbill advertising Women's Social and Political Union meeting
SE4
Cloth seal
SE6


  Stories from SE23  
 
Cafés
by Douglas Mcleod, 27/03/2006


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