of
Clothar II, closely copied by Audulf's tremissis with a pendant
Alpha and Omega reverse, rather than the M and A of Clothar II's issues
Duchalais lists the names typically featured on
Merovingian-era coins as reigning kings, their
moneyers and
palace mayors, and high nobles and ecclesiastical officials. He dismissed the idea of Audulf being either a mayor or ecclesiastic out of hand on the basis of the reverse inscription touting a victory; but acknowledged that the inscription and design directly mimicked
solidi and tremisses issued by
Clothar II, that Clothar was specifically identified as a king () on his obverse, that Clothar's name was in the
genitive () while moneyers were more often in the
ablative as on Audulf's coins, and thatas the two words on the obverse are apparently unrelated to one anotherit is quite possible the two words on the reverse were unconnected as well. Given the lack of other identification for the
diademed figure on the obverse of the coins, Duchalais leaned towards interpreting the coin as the issue of a petty king in
Frisia in what is now the central
Netherlands celebrating some obscure victory over his enemies or
paganism. The Frisians of the era were ruled by numerous petty lords rather than Merovingian agents, and this view is generally upheld by modern Dutch scholars. Excavations in
Westergo in northern
Friesland have shown some level of united power or cooperation in the area during the relevant time period, and some scholars even think the victory mentioned on the coins may have been over the Franks themselves, who are recorded
contesting control over the
Rhine delta with the Frisians in the later 7th century. Some
numismatists, however, still consider the Audulf of the coins to have only been the moneyer of another ruler. Boeles went so far as to argue that the "Frisia" of the coin was unrelated to the Dutch area and possibly intended an area near Paris instead, although Lafaurie and
Grierson considered this completely implausible. Following
Robert Cotton and
John Speed, the English coin was long misattributed to
Ealdwulf, the
king of
East Anglia from to 713, a mistake further compounded by a series of errors that recorded it as a
silver sceat penny and progressively garbled the coin's inscription and design. In 1772,
Samuel Pegge correctly argued that all the coins then attributed to the early
Anglo-Saxon kings were actually from
continental Europe or from other rulers of a much later date. In doing so, however, he misattributed Audulf's coin to the 15th-century
Adolf,
duke of
Guelders, after which it was ignored by subsequent numismatists until it was finally connected to Audulf's other coins and correctly restored to the
Merovingian era in the 20th century. == References ==