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.
Additions to www.HistoryInCoins.com
for week commencing
This week's fresh listings:
WMH-7924:
Rare Mint Henry III
Medieval Voided Long Cross Penny.
Phase II provincial mint, 1248-50 only.
Reverse: £225
WMH-7925:
Edward IV Medieval
Hammered Silver Groat. Second reign,
1471-83. Initial mark
Heraldic Cinquefoil (1480-3), Rose on breast, £365
WJC-7926:
Unrecorded 1609/8/7 James
1st Hammered Silver Sixpence. Second coinage, fourth bust, Spink 2658. By no means a pretty coin (maybe the understatement
of the year?!) but for those of us who appreciate the technical side of our
hobby, this is an enormously interesting coin.
Elements of the underlying 8 and 7 are just about discernable. Initial mark
Coronet, which did in fact span the entirety of the three years on this coin,
so no adjustment needed there. £445 RESERVED (M.He.3-12-23)
WCom-7927:
1651
Commonwealth Hammered Silver Sixpence.
Initial mark Sun so struck under the Protectorship of Oliver Cromwell – later Anchor coins were
under his son, Richard Cromwell. Spink 3219. This is
the rarer "no stops at the initial mark" variety. Ex Tim Owen (his ticket). A very nice example from
one of the most interesting periods in British history. £635
WCom-7928:
1656 over 52
Commonwealth Hammered Silver Sixpence - a most unusual coin! Initial mark Sun so struck
under the Protectorship of Oliver Cromwell – later
Anchor coins were under his son, Richard Cromwell. Spink 3219. A 1656 sixpence but with only x6 harp
strings, which simply can't be. There is
a 1656 variety with x8 harp strings but definitely not x6. The answer is that this is actually a 1653
(or earlier) reverse that has been dug out of the used die bucket and
purposefully altered (ie a Cromwellian form of
recycling!) in date to become 1656.
Looking at the date itself, there are very odd things going off with the
"5" (there are two DIFFERENT "5" punches, one overstruck on
the other, and possibly a third, although that third one may be simply down to
double striking). Also,
the second "6" looks to be a thin "6" over a fatter
"6". The final
"6" in the date has some residual evidence at the top of its ascender
indicating the top diagonal of the original number, either a "2" or a
"3". The excellent http://www.SunandAnchor.com kindly looked at this coin and
offered 1652 as a reverse die (has to be pre 53 due to harp strings and reverse
shields conform to 52) and 1652 on the obverse (can't be 51 due to large
initial mark and COMMONWEALTH is typical of 52). So here we have just what I promised in the
title - a nice, presentable 1656 Commonwealth sixpence that is actually from
1652 dies and even more unusually, when they randomly dug their hand into the
bucket full of old, discarded dies, they actually pulled out same date
old dies! Many thanks again to http://www.SunandAnchor.com.
I know most of you will be familiar with this site but if not, please do
pay them a visit. A
very nice example from one of the most interesting periods in British history,
not to mention the fact that this is an unrecorded 1656/2 coin. £695 RESERVED (M.He.3-12-23)
WCom-7929:
1649-60
Commonwealth Hammered Silver Halfgroat. A centrally struck,
problem-free attractive coin being much above average. Spink 3221. A very nice coin from a
somewhat interesting period of British history. £165
WCom-7930:
1649-60 Oliver
Cromwell’s Commonwealth Hammered Silver Halfpenny. An issue actually spanning
not just Oliver Cromwell’s stewardship but also that of his son, Richard
Cromwell. Spink
3223. The rarest of the pence
issues by some margin. A tiny coin that could easily have been lost but that was what an
actual halfpenny was equivalent to in silver bullion back in the day so that
dictated the size of the coin.
Small though this is, it is not the smallest hammered coin ever to hit
the streets of £325