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.
Most sold coins are now
accessible via a new link on the front (index) page category grid.
Additions to www.HistoryInCoins.com
for week commencing Tuesday 7th April 2026
WMH-9299: Choice
Grade Henry VI Medieval Hammered Silver Groat First reign, Annulet issue of 1422-30. Full flan. The rarer London mint.
Initial mark Pierced Cross (1422-27).
Annulets to reverse legend and in two reverse
quarters; no annulets to the obverse.
No fleur to the breast. 3.71g. S.R.1835, Whitton 12a. Henry
VI was born December 6, 1421 in Windsor, Berkshire and died May 21 or 22, 1471 in London.
He reigned from 1422 to 1461 and then from 1470 to 1471. He was a pious
and studious recluse whose incapacity for government was one of the causes of
the Wars of the Roses. From a small collection of high
grade, medieval coins; this groat being no exception!
£385
WMH-9300: Choice
Grade Henry VI Medieval Hammered Silver Penny First reign, Annulet issue of 1422-30. Full flan. The rarer London mint.
Initial mark Plain Cross. Annulets in two reverse
quarters; no annulets to the obverse.
0.91g. S.R.1844,
Whitton 3a.
Henry VI was born December 6, 1421 in Windsor, Berkshire and died May 21 or 22, 1471 in London.
He reigned from 1422 to 1461 and then from 1470 to 1471. He was a pious
and studious recluse whose incapacity for government was one of the causes of
the Wars of the Roses. From a small collection of high grade,
medieval coins; this penny being no exception, especially when you consider
the generally indifferent nature of Henry VI pennies, although to be fair, the
Calais pennies somewhat buck this trend.
An attractive and pleasing coin.
£325
WMH-9301: Choice
Grade Henry VI Medieval Hammered Silver Halfpenny First reign, Annulet issue of 1422-30. Full flan. The better London mint.
Initial mark Pierced Cross (1422-27).
Annulets in two reverse quarters; no annulets to the
obverse. 0.54. S.R.1848, Whitton
5. Henry VI was born December
6, 1421 in
Windsor, Berkshire and died May 21 or 22, 1471 in London.
He reigned from 1422 to 1461 and then from 1470 to 1471. He was a pious
and studious recluse whose incapacity for government was one of the causes of
the Wars of the Roses. From a small
collection of high grade, medieval coins. Full legends, toned - a very nice, superior
example.
£185
WTH-9302: Elizabeth
1st Milled or Machine-Pressed Silver Shilling "Milled"
coinage, initial mark Star, 1560-66. Without rose or date; decorated dresss, small size (29.5mm diameter), S.R. 2592. When you
consider that “85%
of Mestrelle’s meagre experimental machine-made coins
were sixpences dated 1562. This leaves
15% for all the other Screw-Pressed sixpences, shillings, groats, threepences,
halfgroats, threefarthings and the gold coinage”,
you gain an insight into just how rare all non 1562 milled coins are. Queen Elizabeth 1st herself
visited both mints (Upper & Lower Houses) upon the occasion of the near
completion of the recoinage on 10th
July 1561. She met with Eloye Mestrelle and viewed his machinery. The visit was reported to be six hours in
length. Eleven years later, Eloye Mestrelle was dismissed
from the mint in 1572 and just six years after that,
he was executed (hanged) for counterfeiting.
When this issue first appeared on the streets of London in the later months of 1561, it
was so different looking to what was in peoples' pockets at the time that it
was met with immediate suspicion and distrust.
People literally bit and bent the coins to test the metal content. Old
tickets here. These milled shillings had no great depth of
design, particularly on the portrait, thus they invariably turn up worn. This is a very good example.
£995
Provenance:
Old sales list ticket,
grading the coin at VF
ex Michael Trenerry - his
ticket, dated 2023, priced £795
WSC-9303: James
II Scottish Hammered Silver Stuart Groat.
Circulated at six pence. First coinage, Edinburgh mint.
Third (type IIIa) fluer-de-lis
issue with tall, narrow crown - S.R. 5225.
Old tickets here. R.W. Kirton states
on his ticket that the crescent stop reverse of this coin is unpublished. The other ticket highlights the apparent die
flaw to the king's face as possibly being an attempt by the die sinker to
highlight the large birthmark which is known to have disfigured the king's left
side.
£945
Provenance:
ex J
& R Edmiston Auction, Glasgow, May 1976
ex
R.A. Macpherson collection, September 2009
ex
R.W. Kirton collection (an excellent numismatic
researcher who amassed a comprehensive collection of Scottish coinage)
Dispersed
DNW 2024
ex HistoryInCoins (2025)