Ask the Scholar

Document scope · 1 page
obj
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory. For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.

Source Description

Verica was the youngest son of Commius. He is identified as the Bericus whom the historian Sion Cassius refers to as being in exile, and appealing to Claudius for help. Commius was king of the Atrebates. When Caesar was planning his first visit to Britain, some Britons sent him envoys with offers of hostages and allegiance to Rome. Caesar received them favorably and retained no hostages but sent Commius and his high commissioner with instructions to persuade the Britons to ally themselves with Rome, and to expect Caesar in person in a few weeks time. This took place in 55 BC. It is therefore possible that Verica was either born fairly late in his father's life or that he was illegitimate. However that may be, his reign can with reasonable accuracy be placed as being in the first and second quarters of the first century AD.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
144326
label
Verica Stater: Sunken Tablet (obverse); Horse and Rider (reverse)
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
144326
contentType
object
title
Verica Stater: Sunken Tablet (obverse); Horse and Rider (reverse)
description
Verica was the youngest son of Commius. He is identified as the Bericus whom the historian Sion Cassius refers to as being in exile, and appealing to Claudius for help. Commius was king of the Atrebates. When Caesar was planning his first visit to Britain, some Britons sent him envoys with offers of hostages and allegiance to Rome. Caesar received them favorably and retained no hostages but sent Commius and his high commissioner with instructions to persuade the Britons to ally themselves with Rome, and to expect Caesar in person in a few weeks time. This took place in 55 BC. It is therefore possible that Verica was either born fairly late in his father's life or that he was illegitimate. However that may be, his reign can with reasonable accuracy be placed as being in the first and second quarters of the first century AD.
date
c. 10–40 CE
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q79921375
genreSpecific
Coins
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Diameter: 1.7 cm (11/16 in.)
cul
England
accession
1969.146
Source extras
tec
gold
tombstone
Verica Stater: Sunken Tablet (obverse); Horse and Rider (reverse), c. 10–40 CE. England. Gold; diameter: 1.7 cm (11/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Norweb Collection, 1969.146
collection
MED - Numismatics
inscriptions
inscription
"COM F"
inscription
VIR REX
inscription_remark
reverse
didYouKnow
Verica was king just before the conquest of Britain by the Romans.
citations
citation
Cleveland Museum of Art, and Emery May Norweb. English Gold Coins, Ancient to Modern Times, On Loan to the Cleveland Museum of Art from the Norweb Collection. 1968.
page_number
pp. 5
citation
Emery May Norweb Collection (Cleveland, Ohio), Emery May Norweb, C. E. Blunt, F. Elmore Jones, and R. P. Mack. Collection of Ancient British, Romano-British and English Coins. London: Spink, 1971.
page_number
pp. 17-18
creditline
The Norweb Collection
updatedAt
2026-05-29 07:24:39.900000
sourceId
144326
dept
Medieval Art
coll
MED - Numismatics
med
gold
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
813d68877a402da4