This week’s fresh listings:
This page is to be updated every
Tuesday and will contain all the latest Coin,
Medal & Token listings for that particular week.
The more observant of you may have realised that I no
longer keep previous "Fresh Listings" coins on this page.
All for sale coins can be
found via the category grid on the front page.
Most sold
coins are now accessible via a
new link on that same category grid.
Additions to www.HistoryInCoins.com
for week commencing Tuesday 16th September 2025
WMH-9201:
Extremely Rare
Mint Edward 1st Medieval Hammered Silver Penny. Unusually, no star or pellet on breast -
class 9b, circa 1299-1300. VILL' KYN GES TON - the very rare Kingston upon Hull mint. There were three reverse dies: VILL, VILL'
and VIL' so this would be the second die, class 9b2. The no star or pellet on breast obverse die
is by far the rarest. Chester, Kingston-upon-Hull and Exeter are the rarest of all the Edward
1st provincial mints (Kingston-upon-Hull and Exeter also being the only Edward 1st
pennies issued over a single class). Out
of the 12,236 pennies found in the Aberdeen Hoard of 1886, over 12,000 were
English with only 2 being from the Chester mint (both class IIIg),
a single coin from Kingston (IXb) and only two
from Exeter (IXb).
To give some context, Bristol is far from common and yet there
were x52 Bristol mint coins in that hoard; London was well over 5,000 coins. The few coins you do see from these three
rare mints are nearly always worn. This
is a particularly good example with provenance back to 2016. An extremely rare coin, more so with grade
and rarer obverse die.
£445
The
following coin has come off reservation and is now available to purchase. A couple of people expressed a strong interest
in buying this coin whist it was reserved but I failed to keep the
correspondence, foolishly thinking that the original buyer would follow
through, something which he continually promised he would do, until he changed
his mind and didn't.
WMH-9151:
Choice Henry II
Tealby Medieval Hammered Silver Penny. Cross and Crosslets issue,
class C2, circa 1163-67. Carlisle mint - [+]PIL[L]AM.ON.CAR[D]. S.R. 1539. Immediately following on
from Stephen. Henry of Anjou
became Henry II upon the death of Stephen - a monarch who had an extremely
tenuous claim to the throne and who only stayed as king because he agreed to
let Stephen, Matilda's son, to ascend upon his death - and even though an impressive
29 mints were opened to produce coinage, the quality was just as poor, maybe
even worse, as the Stephen coinage. Of
those 29 mints, only around a third continued after Henry's recoinage to the
voided short cross and come the later long cross issues, far fewer than
that. Good provenance - see old tickets here. Outstanding portrait - in fact probably the
best I've ever had - and the rarer mint town.
Old tickets here. The recent CNG Lincoln class A penny (only marginally better than this Carlisle example) achieved a hammer price
of $1,200 which as a general rule of thumb, after commissions, comes out at
about £1,200. You'll really struggle to
find better, especially now that the Lincoln example has found a new home!
£885
Provenance:
ex Hari collection
ex Vecchi
There
is also value in keeping the 9th September Fresh Listings up for just one more
week.
WMH-9199: Stephen Hammered Silver
Norman Penny - York Ornamental Group, Flag Type - Battle of Northallerton. Obverse: +STIEF N E R, crowned bust of
Stephen, right, holding lance and pennant (or flag standard) with mullet or
star in field; reverse: cross moline with
fleur-de-lis in each angle, linear circle and legend surrounding with symbols
and the odd letter interspersed and interestingly, an apparent Cross Pattée as
a reverse initial mark (similar to the obverse initial mark), as opposed to the
usual reverse Cross Moline initial mark.
Attributed to the "Ornamented Group of York
mint":
the lance and pennant is thought to represent the Battle of the
Standard, sometimes called the Battle of Northallerton. On the 22nd
August 1138, the English forces, rallied by the Archbishop of York, defeated the
invading Scottish army (led by King David I) at Cowton
Moor, near Northallerton. The battle was a result of King David's
support for his niece, Matilda, in the English succession dispute following the
death of King Henry I. The English army carried the sacred standard of St.
Cuthbert on a cart. Mack listed sixteen examples of
this type, at least eight of which are now in museums - this coin is not a
die-match to any of those sixteen. More
recently, Dr Martin Allen has published a paper in the Numismatic Chronicle, Volume
176, 2016 titled "The York Local Coinage of the Reign of Stephen
(1135-54)", where the flag types are listed as Phase 3. Dr Allen
lists x36 examples of flag types across x21 different die varieties. This reverse die is unlisted in that seminal research publication. Reference: Allen York 31var (the unlisted
reverse die), Mack 217p, S.R.1313, North 919.
1.21g. Toned,
Good VF with excellent metal and completely problem-free. Choice and clearly very
rare indeed, particularly so in this grade. Find better!
£8,995
Provenance:
ex Baldwin's 40 sale, lot 145, May 2005
WJC-9200: Charles 1st Hammered
Silver Halfcrown with Outstanding Provenance. Group IV, fourth horseman, type 4,
foreshortened horse. Tower mint: initial mark obverse Star with the reverse
being Star over Triangle - during this frenetic period of English history, it
was not uncommon for still serviceable old dies to be reused. 1640-41. Of good weight at 14.51g. S.R.2779. Excellent provenance - see old tickets here. Approaching VF for issue.
£675
Provenance:
ex
H.M. Lingford Collection (purchased March 1944 - sold
with his original ticket)
ex
Tim Owen (his iconic pink ticket)