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 16th June 2026

 

 

WMH-9352:  Henry II "Tealby" Medieval Hammered Silver Penny.  Cross and Crosslets coinage, jewelled collar - class E, circa 1170-74.  S.R.1341.  +WILLELM.ON.NIV - Newcastle mint.  A fairly unusual mint signature, ie not the usual NEVCAS or shortened variation there of.  A full, round planchet being good fine, almost VF for issue.  Immediately following on from the reign of 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 remained as king because he'd agreed to let Henry, Matilda's son, ascend the throne 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.  This coin is excellent.  £675

Provenance:

ex Oriole collection, dispersed...

ex Spink

 

WTH-9353:  CHOICE GRADE Mary Solus Tudor Hammered Silver Groat.  Initial mark Pomegranate, the reign of Mary alone being very short: 1553-54 only.  Tower (London) mint, S.R. 2492.   An exceptionally good example in terms of detail - these groats where struck with shallow dies with a propensity for wear on a silver alloy that is very different in composition to the issues of Elizabeth 1st, less than ten years hence.  Mary was the only child of Henry VIII (her mother was Catherine of Aragon) to survive to adulthood.  Mary quickly and efficiently disposed of Lady Jane Gray – proclaimed Queen when Mary’s younger brother Edward VI, died at age 9 – by beheading her, a process not unfamiliar to her, being the daughter of Henry VIII!!  This issue was immediately prior to Mary's marriage to Philip of Spain in July of 1554.  Attractive toning, full round flan, high grade with no issues.  Find better.  £1,165

 

WMH-9354:  Edward IV Medieval Hammered Silver Rarer Second Reign Groat.  Initial mark Heraldic Cinquefoil, 1480-83, London mint.  Class XXI, S.R.2100.  Although not in the same league as the Henry VI Restored reign, Edward's second reign issues are all uncommon compared to those of the first reign.  High grade - exhibiting many of the characteristics of being a hoard coin.   £385

 

WJC-9355:  Charles 1st Hammered Silver Shilling.  Group D, fourth bust, type 3.1.  Initial mark Portcullis, 1633-34.  CR either side of the oval garnished shield.  S.R.2789.  The famous Brooker collection possessed five examples of this type (including the rare inverted CR and the no reverse inner circle varieties), all of which are of a lesser grade than this example.  Full weight, toned.  £365

 

WJC-9356:  Charles 1st Hammered Silver Halfcrown.  Group III, third horseman, type 3a2.  Initial mark Triangle, 1639-40.  The king's cloak flying from his shoulder, rough ground line under the horse.  S.R.2776 (misidentified on the accompanying ticket).  It is interesting to note that the famous Brooker collection possessed five examples of initial mark Triangle - four with no ground line and a single, solitary example with the ground line.  Inverted V for A on reverse, not seen on the aforementioned Brooker example.  Toned and near full weight, very good grade - better than the Brooker example.  £375

 

WJC-9357:  1646 Charles 1st Hammered Silver NEWARK Halfcrown.  Single year type, S.R.3140A.  Obverse: large crown between CR, XXX below, reverse: OBS NEWARK 1646.  Unlike the shillings, there was no NEWARKE variation for the halfcrown.  The besieged Royalists set up a mint and used salvers, flagons, drinking cups, etc., fashioned into hand-cut lozenge-shaped planchets, striking half-crowns, shillings, ninepences, and sixpences.  Struck by the royalist forces who surrendered Newark (just up the River Trent from Nottingham) on May 6, 1646, the day after King Charles I had fled the fortress in secret to surrender himself personally to the besieging Scots, thus this coin would have been part of the final batch.  Interestingly, Newark was actually besieged three times - first siege: 27-28 February 1643, second siege: 29 February to 21 March 1644 and this third siege, lasting from 26 November 1645 to 8 May 1646.  There is evidence on the reverse of underlying host / decoration design, especially above OBS.  Further, there is a distinct host metal crease running diagonally, parallel to the top left side.  There is clear evidence on that portion of the coin where the host silver utensil had been worked in order to remove an angle (perhaps a silver platter?) in order to make a flat sheet of silver in order to be cut into coin.  The strike of the die did not quite obliterate that original feature.  The famous Brooker collection possessed a single examples of both the 1645 and 1646 halfcrown; the 1645 Brooker coin also had reverse host utensil marks/ decoration.  A nice, honest example that's not been pierced and plugged, as most seem to have been these days.  £1,995

 

WSC-9358:  CHOICE GRADE 1598 Scottish James VI Hammered Silver Ten Shillings.  Seventh coinage, bear headed bust in armour, right.  Reverse triple-headed thistle.  S.R.5493.  James was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots, and a great-great-grandson of Henry VII.  He acceded to the Scottish throne at the age of thirteen months, after his mother was forced to abdicate.  At 57 years and 246 days, James's reign in Scotland was the longest of any Scottish monarch.  The Scottish reign was very successful - the period in England as James 1st, perhaps less so.  Round flan and a truly remarkable grade - considering this is a Scottish coin (and as we're all aware, Scottish coins were circulated much more ferociously than their English counterparts, not least because there was a general dearth of coinage in Scotland), it's almost unheard of to see any Scottish coinage in such a high grade, let alone a larger coin like this one with a genuine propensity for rapid wear as a result of low-relief obverse dies.  It can't be far off as-struck and surely one of the best examples extant - the Spink plate coin is much inferior; the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford and the Hunterian Museum in Glasgow hold x14 ten shillings between them (see Sylloge of Coins of the British Isles #35), all of which are of vastly inferior grades; The National Museum of Scotland (Edinburgh) holds a single example of 1598 but gives no illustration.  To be fair, the Coincraft plate coin is superb and is comparable to this coin.  The only downside to this coin is that it has been unfavourably cleaned and so will require time to re-tone in natural daylight and fresh air.  An exceptional coin.  £775