EXPLANATION OF PLATE 47. 



Fig. 1. The head ornament on this piece becomes more cross-like than in the preced 

 ing, while upon the reverse the appearance of a nucleated circle beneath 

 the horse is counteibalaiiced by another with.au additional circle of dots 

 or pellets about it above the animal s back. Upon the reverse is the name 

 of a prince, TASCIOVAN, whose Latinized name would be TASCIOVANUS, the 

 exact form in which the name appears upon the coins of Cunobeline, who 

 proclaims himself to have been TASCIOVAXI F. 



Fig. 2. On this piece the cruciform ornament becomes still more intricate, while the 

 circles are in various forms and of various types. 



Fig. 3. The remains of the wreath are undefined, and the object beneath the horse 

 has assumed a stellar form instead of a circle, which in turn was a helmet 

 in the prototype. 



Figs. 4-7. These coins are cast and not stamped. In some specimens noted by Doctor 

 Evans the grain of the wooden mold is distinctly visible. The obverse 

 in all bears a head in imitation of some petroglyphic remains in North 

 America, though the reverse shows the outline of an animal believed to 

 be a horse. 



Fig. 8. This specimen has a laureate bust without any signs of a face; the open 

 crescents are connected by a serpent line. The reverse bears a horse with 

 a triple tail and a wheel beneath the body. 



