THE MICHAEL GIETZELT COLLECTION of BRITISH and IRISH COINS 14 NOVEMBER 2018
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The Gold Coins of England, Arranged and Described
THE GOLD COINS OF ENGLAND. FMOTTIS PIECE. Edward die Coiiiessor. 16 TT^mund, Abp.of Yo Offa . King of Mercia ?.$.&&>. THE GOLD COINS OF ENGLAND AERANGED AND DESCRIBED BEING A SEQUEL TO MR. HAWKINS' SILVER COINS OF ENGLAND, BY HIS GRANDSON KOBEET LLOYD KENYON See p. 15. Principally from the collection in tlie British Museum, and also from coins and information communicated by J. Evans, Esq., President of the Numismatic. Society, and others. LONDON: BERNARD QUARITCH, 15 PICCADILLY MDCCCLXXXIV. : LONDON KV1AN AND <ON, PRINTERS, HART STREET. COVENT r,ARI>E\. 5 rubies, having a cross in the centre, and evidently intended to symbolize the Trinity. The workmanship is pronounced by Mr. Akerman to be doubtless anterior to the 8th century. Three of the coins are blanks, which seems to prove that the whole belonged to a moneyer. Nine are imitations of coins of Licinius, and one of Leo, Emperors of the East, 308 to 324, and 451 to 474, respectively. Five bear the names of French cities, Mettis, Marsallo, Parisius. Thirty- nine are of the seven types described in these pages. The remaining forty-three are of twenty-two different types, and all are in weight and general appearance similar to Merovingian ti-ientes. The average weight is 19*9 grains, and very few individual coins differ much from this. With respect to Abbo, whose name appears on this coin, the Vicomte de Ponton d'Ainecourt, who has paid great attention to the Merovingian series, has shown in the " Annuaire de la Societe Francaise de Numismatique " for 1873, that Abbo was a moneyer at Chalon-sur-Saone, pro- bably under Gontran, King of Burgundy, a.d. -
Thursday, Dec. 1950
Second Day's Sale: THURSDAY, DEC. 1950 at 1 p.m. precisely LOT COMMONWEALTH (1649.60). 243 N Unite 1649, usual type with m.m. sun. Weakly struck in parts, otherwise extremely fine and a rare date. 244 A{ Crown 1652, usual type. The obverse extremely fine, the rev. nearly so. 245 IR -- Another, 1656 over 4. Nearly extremely fine. 246 iR -- Another, 1656, in good slate, and Halfcrown same date, Shilling similar, Sixpence 1652, Twopence and Penny. JtI ostly fine. 6 CROMWELL. 247* N Broad 1656, usual type. Brilliant, practically mint state, very rare. 1 248 iR Crown, 1658, usual type, with flaw visible below neck. Extremely fine and rare. 249 A{ Halfcrown 1658, similar. Extremely fine. CHARLES II (1660-85). 250* N Hammered Unite, 2nd issue, obu. without inner circle, with mark of value, extremely fine and rare,' and IR Hammer- ed Sixpence, 3rd issue, Threepence and Penny similar, some fine. 4 LOT '::;1 N Guinea 1676, rounded truncation. Very fine. ~'i2 JR Crowns 1662, rose, edge undated, very fine; and no rose, edge undated, fine. 3 _'i3 .-R -- Others, 1663, fine; and 1664, nearly very fine. 2 :?5-1 iR. -- Another, 1666 with elephant beneath bust. Very fine tor this rare variety. 1 JR -- Others, 1671 and 1676. Both better than fine. 2 ~56 JR -- Others of 1679, with small and large busts. Both very fine. 2 _57 /R -- Electrotype copy of the extremely rare Petition Crown by Simon. JR Scottish Crown or Dollar, 1682, 2nd Coinage, F below bust on obverse. A very rare date and in unttsually fine con- dition. -
Britain's Cartwheel Coinage of 1797
Britain's Cartwheel Coinage of 1797 by George Manz You've probably heard these words and names before: Cartwheel, Soho, Matthew Boulton, and James Watt. But did you know how instrumental they were in accelerating the Industrial Revolution? Like the strands of a rope, the history of Britain's 1797 Cartwheel coinage is intertwined with the Industrial Revolution. And that change in the method of producing goods for market is intermeshed with the Soho Mint and its owners, Matthew Boulton and James Watt. We begin this story in Birmingham, England in 1759 when Matthew Boulton Jr., now in his early 30s, inherited his father's toy business which manufactured many items, including buttons. Later that year, or possibly the following year, young Matthew Boulton's first wife Mary died. "While personally devastating," Richard Doty writes in his marvelous book, The Soho Mint & the Industrialization of Money, "the deaths of his father and his first wife helped make Soho possible. His father had left the toy business to him, while the estate of his wife, who was a daughter and co-heiress of the wealthy Luke Robinson of Litchfield, added to his growing resources." Doty, the curator of numismatics for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., notes that Boulton eventually went on to wed Mary's sister Anne; Luke Robinson's other daughter and now sole heir to the family fortune. Boulton built a mill which he called Soho Manufactory, named for a place already called Soho, near Birmingham. The mill was erected beside Hockley Brook, which provided the water- power to help power the new factory. -
Guide to the Collection of Irish Antiquities
NATIONAL MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND ART, DUBLIN. GUIDE TO THE COLLECTION OF IRISH ANTIQUITIES. (ROYAL IRISH ACADEMY COLLECTION). ANGLO IRISH COINS. BY G COFFEY, B.A.X., M.R.I.A. " dtm; i, in : printed for his majesty's stationery office By CAHILL & CO., LTD., 40 Lower Ormond Quay. 1911 Price One Shilling. cj 35X5*. I CATALOGUE OF \ IRISH COINS In the Collection of the Royal Irish Academy. (National Museum, Dublin.) PART II. ANGLO-IRISH. JOHN DE CURCY.—Farthings struck by John De Curcy (Earl of Ulster, 1181) at Downpatrick and Carrickfergus. (See Dr. A. Smith's paper in the Numismatic Chronicle, N.S., Vol. III., p. 149). £ OBVERSE. REVERSE. 17. Staff between JiCRAGF, with mark of R and I. abbreviation. In inner circle a double cross pommee, with pellet in centre. Smith No. 10. 18. (Duplicate). Do. 19. Smith No. 11. 20. Smith No. 12. 21. (Duplicate). Type with name Goan D'Qurci on reverse. Obverse—PATRIC or PATRICII, a small cross before and at end of word. In inner circle a cross without staff. Reverse—GOAN D QVRCI. In inner circle a short double cross. (Legend collected from several coins). 1. ^PIT .... GOANDQU . (Irish or Saxon T.) Smith No. 13. 2. ^PATRIC . „ J<. ANDQURCI. Smith No. 14. 3. ^PATRIGV^ QURCI. Smith No. 15. 4. ^PA . IOJ< ^GOA . URCI. Smith No. 16. 5. Duplicate (?) of S. No. 6. ,, (broken). 7. Similar in type of ob- Legend unintelligible. In single verse. Legend unin- inner circle a cross ; telligible. resembles the type of the mascle farthings of John. Weight 2.7 grains ; probably a forgery of the time. -
Coins Medals 27Th Ocrober 2016.Indd
Coins & Medals Thursday 27th October 2016 Coins & Medals Thursday 27th October 2016 at 11:00am Index Antique & Modern Jewellery Gold Coins 1 - 166 Silver & Base Metal Coins 167 - 224 Medallions & ingots 225 - 245 Military & World Medals 246 - 280 Civil & Sporting Medals 281 - 283 Fraternal Medals 284 - 290 Viewing Times 22nd October 2016 11.00am - 4.00pm 24th October 2016 10.00am - 4.00pm Vintage Jewellery & 26th October 2016 10.00am - 4.00pm Accessories 27th October 2016 8.30am - 11.00am Jewellery Watches 19 Augusta Street | Birmingham B18 6JA | Tel 0121 212 2131 | www.fellows.co.uk | [email protected] | Company No. 7155090 General Information Why Buy? Why Sell? COMPETITIVE buyer’s premium HIGH PRICES consistently achieved LIVE online bidding FLEXIBLE commission rates FULLY illustrated catalogue FREE valuations with no obligation to consign EASY to use, functional website RAPID turnaround for your goods ACCURATE condition reports TARGETED advertising to a global audience SPECIALISTS on hand to offer advice SUPERIOR quality catalogues TRACKED AND INSURED shipping* FULLY integrated website *Please contact Fellows for further information. Contact the Coins and Medals Department... Follow Us On... Naomi Clarke Sarah Isaacs Senior Specialist Administrator 0121 212 2131 0121 212 2131 facebook.com/fellowsauctions [email protected] [email protected] Further Information @fellowsauctions fellowsauctions Additional Images and Condition Telephone Bidding is available if you Reports can be found online at our cannot attend an auction. Please ring website www.fellows.co.uk 0121 212 2131 to arrange a phone line. Download our catalogue app today and view our printed catalogues on Live Bidding your device. -
The Milled Coinage of Elizabeth I
THE MILLED COINAGE OF ELIZABETH I D. G. BORDEN AND I. D. BROWN Introduction THIS paper describes a detailed study of the coins produced by Eloy Mestrelle's mill at the Tower of London between 1560 and 1571. We have used the information obtained from an examination of the coins to fill out the story of Eloy and his machinery that is given by the surviving documents. There have been a number of previous studies of this coinage. Peter Sanders was one of the first to provide a listing of the silver coins1 and more recently one of us (DGB) has published photographs of the principal types.2 The meagre documentary evidence relating to this coinage has been chronicled by Ruding,3 Symonds,4 Craig,5 Goldman6 and most recently by Challis.7 Hocking8 and Challis have given accounts of what little it known of the machinery used. This study first summarises the history of Mestrelle and his mill as found in the documents and then describes our die analysis based on an examination of enlarged photographs of 637 coins. We combine these two to propose a classification for the coinage in Appendix 2. Mestrelle and the Milled Coinage of Elizabeth I Queen Elizabeth I succeeded her sister Mary I as queen of England and Ireland in November 1558. On 31 December 1558 she signed a commission to Sir Edmund Peckham as high treasurer of the mint to produce gold and silver coins of the same denominations and standards as those of her sister, differing only in having her portrait and titles.9 The coins struck over the next eighteen months mostly never saw circulation because the large amount of base silver coin in circulation drove all the good coin into private savings or, worse, into the melting pot. -
Malton Antique Sale
Boulton & Cooper MALTON ANTIQUE SALE WEDNESDAY 22ND OCTOBER AT 10.00am At The Milton Rooms, Market Place, Malton, North Yorkshire. YO17 7LX VIEWING: Tuesday 21st October 10.00am – 7.00pm & on morning of sale from 9.00am REQUESTS FOR FURTHER INFORMATION OR IMAGES SHOULD BE RECEIVED BY US NO LATER THAN 1PM THE DAY BEFORE THE SALE China 1 – 48 Glassware 49 – 65 Metalware 66 – 80 Books 81 – 99 Platedware & Silver 100 - 128 Jewellery 129 – 206 Coins, Banknotes & Token 207 – 372 Stamps 373 – 403 Collector’s Items 404 – 492 Pictures & Prints 493 – 521 Clocks & Barometers 522 – 526 Carpets & Rugs 527 – 533 Furniture 534 – 590 CHINA 1. A Royal Doulton Character Jug 'Winston Churchill', 9" (23cms) high and a Doulton tobacco set comprising cigarette box (cover missing) and five small oblong dishes decorated with hounds and foxes (one chipped). £40-60 2. A Cantonese Plate decorated with panels of figures and flowers, 10" (26cms) diameter, an Imari pattern plate, two ginger jars and three other Oriental plates. £30-40 3. Six Royal Crown Derby Coffee Cans and Saucers (one cup a/f), 19th Century Masons Ironstone plate, two other plates and a small Dresden oval box and cover. £30-40 4. A Paragon Cup, Saucer and Plate commemorating the Coronation of Edward VIII and a similar George VI coronation cup. £10-20 5. A Royal Doulton Character Jug 'Gondolier' DH6589, large size. £50-70 6. A set of twelve Royal Worcester 'Months of the Year' figures of children, modelled by F C Doughty. (June & November damaged). £400-500 7. An English Delft oval Meat Plate decorated with Oriental landscapes in blue and white. -
(SOVEREIGN COINS) ORDER 1999 Laid Before Tynwald on 20Th April
Statutory Document No. 118/99 CURRENCY ACT 1992 CURRENCY (SOVEREIGN COINS) ORDER 1999 Laid before Tynwald on 20th April 1999 Coming into operation on 10th March 1999 In exercise of the powers conferred upon the Treasury by section 5(1) of the Currency Act 1992(a) and of all other powers enabling it in that behalf, the following Order is hereby made:- Citation and commencement 1. This Order may be cited as the Currency (Sovereign Coins) Order 1999 and shall come into operation on 10th March 1999. Interpretation 2. (1) In this Order "the coins" means coins of the denominations of one fifth Sovereign, one half Sovereign, three quarters Sovereign, one Sovereign, two Sovereigns and five Sovereigns and which are to be issued by the Treasury. (2) The face value of a Sovereign shall be one pound and multiple and fractional values shall be calculated accordingly. Composition, size and weight of the coins 3. The coins shall be in the form of ingots and of the specifications set out in columns (ii) to (vi) of the Schedule. Design of the coins 4. (1) On the obverse of the coins there shall be an effigy of Her Majesty the Queen by Ian Rank-Broadley with the inscriptions "ELIZABETH II", "ISLE OF MAN" and the year of the issue. (2) On the reverse of the coins there shall be a design incorporating a Triskeles, the inscriptions "Isle of Man Government", "FINE GOLD 999.9", the weight and the denomination of the coin. 1~ (a) 1992 c.14 price 30 pence Article 3 SCHEDULE SPECIFICATION FOR ISLE OF MAN SOVEREIGN COINS (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) (v) (vi) Denomination -
INFORMATION BULLETIN #50 SALES TAX JULY 2017 (Replaces Information Bulletin #50 Dated July 2016) Effective Date: July 1, 2016 (Retroactive)
INFORMATION BULLETIN #50 SALES TAX JULY 2017 (Replaces Information Bulletin #50 dated July 2016) Effective Date: July 1, 2016 (Retroactive) SUBJECT: Sales of Coins, Bullion, or Legal Tender REFERENCE: IC 6-2.5-3-5; IC 6-2.5-4-1; 45 IAC 2.2-4-1; IC 6-2.5-5-47 DISCLAIMER: Information bulletins are intended to provide nontechnical assistance to the general public. Every attempt is made to provide information that is consistent with the appropriate statutes, rules, and court decisions. Any information that is inconsistent with the law, regulations, or court decisions is not binding on the department or the taxpayer. Therefore, the information provided herein should serve only as a foundation for further investigation and study of the current law and procedures related to the subject matter covered herein. SUMMARY OF CHANGES Other than nonsubstantive, technical changes, this bulletin is revised to clarify that sales tax exemption for certain coins, bullion, or legal tender applies to coins, bullion, or legal tender that would be allowable investments in individual retirement accounts or individually-directed accounts, even if such coins, bullion, or legal tender was not actually held in such accounts. INTRODUCTION In general, an excise tax known as the state gross retail (“sales”) tax is imposed on sales of tangible personal property made in Indiana. However, transactions involving the sale of or the lease or rental of storage for certain coins, bullion, or legal tender are exempt from sales tax. Transactions involving the sale of coins or bullion are exempt from sales tax if the coins or bullion are permitted investments by an individual retirement account (“IRA”) or by an individually-directed account (“IDA”) under 26 U.S.C. -
Download This Lesson in Adobe Acrobat Format
REVOLUTIONARY MONEY Part One 3 Unlike the Spanish colonists to the south, the English settlers of our original thirteen colonies found no gold or silver among the riches of their new land. Neither did they receive great supplies of gold and silver coins from Britain—money was supposed to move the other way, to the mother country, in exchange for goods. The monetary system in the colonies was “notable because it was based on thin air,” says Smithsonian numismatics curator Richard Doty in his book America’s Money, America’s Story. To make up for the lack of curren- cy, the colonists would “replicate and create, try, reject, and redesign every monetary form ever invented anywhere else.” Examples of most of those forms are on display in the Hall of the History of Money and Medals at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, Behring Center, an exhibit that draws on the 1.6 million coins and pieces of paper money in the National Numismatic Collection. Here in Smithsonian in Your Classroom, we present images of paper money from the American Revolution. Students examine the money in order to gather primary source information about the times— the Revolutionary period in general and the specific times when the bills were issued. The lessons address national standards for American history and for historical thinking. An issue of Smithsonian in Your Classroom titled “What Is Currency? Lessons from Historic Africa” introduces students to the meaning and uses of money, and might serve as a companion to this issue. It is on our Web site, educate.si.edu, under Lesson Plans. -
PJ01661 Bullion Britannia 2021 8PP Booklet D15 International PRINT.Indd
® Britannia 2021 BULLION COIN RANGE Redefining Bullion Security SURFACE ANIMATION MICRO-TEXT TINCTURE LINES LATENT FEATURE KEY FEATURES MICROTEXT LATENT FEATURE TINCTURE LINES SURFACE ANIMATION Th ese features are available on the one ounce, TIMELESS TRADITION, half-ounce, quarter-ounce and tenth-ounce fi ne gold MODERN INNOVATION editions of the coin and the one ounce fi ne silver edition. For centuries, Britannia has represented Britain. In 2021, this iconic symbol leads the way, redefi ning security in the bullion market with four groundbreaking features that combine to create the most visually secure coin in the world. Th e new Britannia design has micro-text featuring the INVEST IN A wording ‘DECUS ET TUTAMEN’, which translates as TIMELESS ICON ‘AN ORNAMENT AND A SAFEGUARD’, describing the features that both decorate and protect the coin. A new Th is award-winning Britannia design was created by latent feature switches between a trident and a padlock based Philip Nathan and was fi rst struck in 1987. In one hand, on the viewer’s perspective, emphasising Britannia’s maritime Britannia holds an olive branch which symbolises peace. strength and the coin’s secure nature. Details like the Union In the other, she holds a trident as a reminder of the nation’s fl ag on Britannia’s shield have been specially highlighted with power and a nod to Britannia’s naval connections. tincture lines, and the background has a surface animation With her Corinthian helmet and Union fl ag shield by her that refl ects the fl ow of waves as the coin is moved. -
A Group of Coins Struck in Roman Britain
A group of coins struck in Roman Britain 1001 Antoninus Pius (AD.138-161), Æ as, believed to be struck at a British travelling mint, laur. bust r., rev. BRITANNIA COS III S C, Britannia seated on rock in an attitude of sadness, wt. 12.68gms. (Sp. COE no 646; RIC.934), patinated, almost extremely fine, an exceptional example of this very poor issue £800-1000 This was struck to commemorate the quashing of a northern uprising in AD.154-5 when the Antonine wall was evacuated after its construction. This issue, always poorly struck and on a small flan, is believed to have been struck with the legions. 1002 Carausius, usurper in Britain (AD.287-296), Æ antoninianus, C mint, IMP C CARAVSIVS PF AVG, radiate dr. bust r., rev. VIRTVS AVG, Mars stg. l. with reversed spear and shield, S in field,in ex. C, wt. 4.63gms. (RIC.-), well struck with some original silvering, dark patina, extremely fine, an exceptional example, probably unique £600-800 An unpublished reverse variety depicting Mars with these attributes and position. Recorded at the British Museum. 1003 Carausius, usurper in Britain (AD.287-296), Æ antoninianus, London mint, VIRTVS CARAVSI AVG, radiate and cuir. bust l., holding shield and spear, rev. PAX AVG, Pax stg. l., FO in field, in ex. ML, wt. 4.14gms. (RIC.116), dark patina, well struck with a superb military-style bust, extremely fine and very rare thus, an exceptional example £1200-1500 1004 Diocletian, struck by Carausius, usurper in Britain (AD.287-296), Æ antoninianus, C mint, IMP C DIOCLETIANVS AVG, radiate cuir.