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 17th June 2025
Removed from reservation and available to buy:
WI-7340:
1694 Irish
William & Mary *High Grade* Copper Halfpenny. Struck at Dublin during a short
three year run. Near all the copper issues from Charles II
until the Hanoverians, but particularly so this specific Irish W&M issue,
were struck on planchets made from a very soft copper alloy, one that was
really not up to the job. As a result,
these coins quickly deteriorated through initial circulation. What made the W&M coins in particular so
susceptible to wear was the large relief conjoined busts obverse. I’d almost go as
far to suggest that the W&M Irish halfpence wore down through circulation
at a faster rate than the tin issues, and they really did wear down fast! Sold with an old auction
slip stating “Very Fine”, together with an old cabinet ticket.
£395
Additions:
WSC-9162: Alexander III Scottish
Medieval Hammered Silver Penny. Second coinage, 1280-86.
Scarce subclass E2. Twenty points to the reverse stars with
(unusually) no extra reverse pellets. Rarer Aberdeen mint. S.R.5056. A lovely coin made
all the more desirable with the rarer subclass.
Traditionally, Aberdeen has been identified as having x23 reverse points but
R.W. Kirton gives this x20 point reverse to Aberdeen.
£385
Provenance:
Ex R.W. Kirton
collection (an excellent numismatic researcher who amassed a comprehensive
collection of Scottish coinage), purchased 1982
Ex Nigel
Mills
WSC-9163: Robert II Scottish
Medieval Hammered Silver HALFPENNY.
Left facing bust of Robert with the reverse unusually showing x5 pointed
mullets in all quarters unlike the previous x5 points in two quarters. S.R. 5152. The first Scottish king of the Stewart line. Edinburgh mint.
Robert II’s
grandfather was Robert the Bruce; his mother, Marjorie Bruce, being Robert
Bruce's daughter. Robert was Regent
under the imprisoned David II and was himself later imprisoned with his three
sons in England when Edward III was
recognised as successor to David II. All
Robert II coins are hard to source, these minors particularly so.
£235
WSC-9164:
Scottish Prince Henry
Hammered Silver Penny - Excessively Rare Unique Variety. Earl of Northumberland and
Huntingdon. Period B or C (this
is how it's currently classified although there is a tentative Period B issue
of Newcastle) so circa mid to late 1140's. Obverse: +[NEN]CI
C[ON] - translating to Count Henry; reverse: [+RIC]CA[RD O]N.CAR. Moneyer Ricard
at the Carlisle mint. S.R.5012. The Prince Henry
coinage circulated alongside his father's during the lifetime of David 1st only
- Henry died a year before his father.
This Period B or C issue is the most desirable type as it has a
unique-for-the-period reverse cross fleury with no
pellets or annulets in the angles - the similar reverses on
David 1st, Malcolm IV and even the English Henry 1st cross fleury
coins all used pellets or annulets in the angles. The earlier Prince Henry Period A coins have
a Cross Moline reverse (resembling Stephen B.M.C. i
English pennies) and the later Period D coins have a reverse Cross Crosslet
(resembling the English Henry II Tealby issues, even
though these would not be struck until six years after Prince Henry's untimely
death! Period A was struck at Corbridge only, Period B or C was struck at Carlisle only and Period D (this issue even reads STIFENE REX for Stephen) was
probably Banborough.
None of the relevant major institutional collections (Scottish National,
Hunterian, Glasgow, Ashmolen etc) appear to have any
Prince Henry coins in their collections.
This research paper, taken from the 2013 British Numismatic Journal,
makes for quite interesting reading (copy & paste the link): https://www.britnumsoc.org/publications/Digital%20BNJ/pdfs/2013_BNJ_83_6.pdf The Henry 1st type
xv penny overstruck with Prince Henry's name that Mattinson
& Cherry refer to in the article is one that was sold through HistoryInCoins well over a decade ago now - I remember it
caused quite a stir at the time! It is
interesting to note that on the coin for sale here, the obverse & reverse
legends, whilst not retrograde, are actually made up of reversed letters. You are lucky to get any legend at all with
this issue - the S.R. plate coin is similar to this one on the reverse whilst
the Coincraft plate coin has virtually no legends at all. The total number of all Prince Henry coins
extant is miniscule and of Period B or C, smaller still. The majority of this issue is under Wilelm of Carlisle so this coin, unusually showing Ricard as moneyer, adds further still to the rarity. Good metal, problem-free and excessively
rare.
£7,950
Provenance:
Found Hexam
(Northumberland) December 2024: catalogued by Dr Martin Allen for inclusion
into the EMC / SCBI
database