The Iceni occupied what is now Norfolk and Suffolk, and their coinage in this period reflects a tribe operating under Roman tributary pressure following the conquest of 43 AD — though this type likely predates that disruption by a decade or more. Iceni silver units were never produced in the volumes of their Gaulish counterparts, and the "Toney Curly Top Ring" classification belongs to a loose typological grouping assembled largely from metal-detector finds across the former tribal territory, with Saham Toney in Norfolk lending its name to this variety after significant site assemblages recovered there.
The Iceni occupied what is now Norfolk and Suffolk, and their coinage in this period reflects a tribe operating under Roman tributary pressure following the conquest of 43 AD — though this type likely predates that disruption by a decade or more. Iceni silver units were never produced in the volumes of their Gaulish counterparts, and the "Toney Curly Top Ring" classification belongs to a loose typological grouping assembled largely from metal-detector finds across the former tribal territory, with Saham Toney in Norfolk lending its name to this variety after significant site assemblages recovered there.