The Volcae Tectosages occupied territory around Tolosa (modern Toulouse), a city whose name appears in Roman sources specifically because of a catastrophic sacred treasury incident in 106 BC — the consul Caepio plundered the town's temple gold and silver, was subsequently routed by the Cimbri, and the "Cursed Gold of Tolosa" became a byword in Roman moralizing literature for generations. These tiny obols were struck well after that episode, during a period of gradual Roman administrative absorption of Gallia Narbonensis.
The negroid head type on LT 3351 is a recognized iconographic subgroup among southern Gaulish silver fractions, likely derived from Massaliote prototypes that themselves drew on North African or Ptolemaic coin imagery transmitted through Mediterranean trade networks.
The Volcae Tectosages occupied territory around Tolosa (modern Toulouse), a city whose name appears in Roman sources specifically because of a catastrophic sacred treasury incident in 106 BC — the consul Caepio plundered the town's temple gold and silver, was subsequently routed by the Cimbri, and the "Cursed Gold of Tolosa" became a byword in Roman moralizing literature for generations. These tiny obols were struck well after that episode, during a period of gradual Roman administrative absorption of Gallia Narbonensis.
The negroid head type on LT 3351 is a recognized iconographic subgroup among southern Gaulish silver fractions, likely derived from Massaliote prototypes that themselves drew on North African or Ptolemaic coin imagery transmitted through Mediterranean trade networks.