Details
LOT 3506
France, Kingdom. Philippe IV 'le Bel' (the Fair) AR Gros Tournois. 1285-1290.
✠ BHDICTV ⁝ SIT ⁝ HOᙏЄ ⁝ DHI ⁝ ꞂRI ⁝ DЄI •I•ҺV XPI in outer margin, ✠ PҺILIPPVS REX in inner margin, short cross pattée / ✠ TVRONVS CIVIS around châtel tournois surmounted by lis within border of twelve lis. (NGC graded GENUINE (#8230595-010).).
Provenance
Ex Michael Trenerry, Truro, UK, 1980s.
Private North Country, UK, collection.
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LOT 3506
France, Kingdom. Philippe IV 'le Bel' (the Fair) AR Gros Tournois.
Sold for (Inc. bp): £85
RELATED LOTS
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Ostrogoths, Municipal coinage of Rome AE 20 Nummi or Half Follis. Time of Athalaric, AD 526-534.
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Rome mint. [IN]VIC[TA ROMA], draped bust of Roma to right, wearing crested helmet, pendant earring and necklace / She-wolf standing to left, head turned back to watch the two infants Romulus and Remus suckling; two stars flanking I above, [XX (mark of value)] below. Hahn, MIB 71c (Theoderic); Kraus 29; Metlich 84b; MEC 1, 97-8. 8.54gr, 22mm, 2h.
Good Fine.
Private collection, acquired 1980-1985.
Although the most noticeable of the bronze coins used in Italy under the Ostrogoths are the countermarked asses and other earlier types, in fact these did not make up the bulk of the copper coinage in circulation at that time. Under Odovacar and the Ostrogoths the Roman Senate enjoyed a brief Indian summer of power; amongst its activities was a revival of the ancient Senatorial privilege of minting in bronze which, after a very brief issue in the name of Zeno, then consisted of types purely Roman in character making no reference to either imperial or royal authority. This revived Senatorial coinage features the helmeted bust of Roma along with the ironic obverse inscription INVICTA ROMA, and recalls the ancient silver coins of the Republic. Coming to an end in AD 535/6, when it was briefly replaced by the portrait coins of Theodahad, after the occupation of Rome by the forces of Belisarius it was in turn replaced by a regular 'Byzantine' imperial coinage in the name of Justinian in 537. When Rome again fell under Ostrogothic control and the mint was reopened in 549, the coinage issued was purely royal and Ostrogothic in character, and so this series may therefore be rightfully described as the final issue of coinage struck by the ancient Romans in their own name. -
Crusaders. Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, Baldwin III BI Denier. 1143-1163.
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BALDVINVS ⁝ RЄX, cross pattée / DЄ bIERVSALЄM, tower of David. Metcalf, Crusades -; CCS -. 0.80gr, 17mm, 5h.
Near Very Fine. Extremely rare; apparently unpublished variety.
From the collection of a gentleman, acquired on the London art market in the 1990s. -
France, Melgueil (County). Uncertain Count or Bishop BI Denier. 12th-13th century AD.
Sold for (Inc. bp): £20
Maguelonne mint. Degraded legend, cross with crossbars composed of episcopal mitres; pellet in first quarter / Degraded legend, four annulets in cruciform pattern around central pellet. Duplessy 1578; Poey d'Avant 3845; Roberts 4336. 1.19gr, 17mm.
Near Very Fine.
From the collection of a gentleman, acquired on the London art market in the 1990s.
