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Another example of a unique coin from someplace outside the U.S. that sold for a pittance compared to U.S. numismatic rarities.
This is probably a big reason many US collectors who stick with the hobby move to an adjacent non-US field.
This is an interesting find, but I agree with one of the article's longer comments -- it seems a tad misleading. For the time period, it's a bit more akin to finding a new "king" of a Germanic tribe or something. This era isn't my specialty, but was there an "England" by any contemporaneous standard in 50 BCE? I've never thought of England and Rome a co-existing entities...