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534325 Los(e)/Seite
U2 How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb full promo set including Vinyl album, 2 x Vertigo 12” singles plus 7” & 10”, mug, word game, LED Light, 5 x 12” shop promo cards some double sided, CD album, magazine of the day, photocopy of letter from Bono explaining (RED) & booklet, calendar, track listing given out at a playback, phototcopy of interview with band about album, Vertigo Remix CDR’s one set dated 15/10/2004 other dated 22/10/2004, All 4 singles taken from the album, 2 CD & DVD packs in cardboard cases, promo CD’s of each single, Original Of The Species promo CD, 2 x 12 carrier bags & 4 x CD size carrier bags.
Early And Large Alpha Teddy Bear, Made by Chiltern Toys 5-ways jointed, light blond mohair. Typical features and proportions of early Bears including chunky limbs, smaller hands and wrists, and a prominent muzzle. With early "webbed" claw stitching on hands, embroidered nose and mouth. Eyes Are Missing. Height 26 Inches
Burgundy Red Garnet Large Cluster Pendant, 23 oval cut deep, rich red garnets, with flashes of purple and deep pink when viewed against light, totalling 25cts, set in a lozenge shape, in 14ct gold vermeil and silver, creating an impressive, large, three dimensional pendant; 1.75 inches high x 1.25 wide
Moorcroft Octagonal 'Anemone' Pattern Bowl, pink, plum and purple flowers against a light to dark green band merging to dark blue on the octagonal rim and cobalt blue to the centre; 10 inches in diameter x 2.5 high (restored, over-painting to large area of rim, crack down and most of underside, good colours, display only)
World 1867 – 1930 Collection in vintage approval, with fine range of classics with some good stamps in nice condition, mainly light used with cds ,we note USA, Italy, Hungary with 1871 Franz Joseph to 25Kr fu, Spain, Hawaii, Brit Empire, Denmark inc 1871 25k official, Norway with 1867 to 8 Sk fu etc. Hi cat, original unpicked. Approx 160 Reserve: £120
A 19thC bone needlework case, with carved decoration, together with a miniature ship in a bottle, Devonshire Light Infantry badge, silver match case with engine turned decoration, Birmingham 1937, miniature Guinness bottle, New Testament 1914, and a silver backed hair brush, Chester 1917. (7)
GERMAN EAST AFRICAN BANKNOTES, INTERIMS, Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Bank, one rupie, 1 February 1916, Serie A4 (16): nos. 33230-32; 33234-35; 33239; 33241-43; 33245, 33247-49; 33251; 33260; 33280, Berendt-Frühling signatures (Ros.928ad; Pick 21), a few with light staining, good extremely fine to about uncirculated (16)
† FOREIGN COINS, Australia, ‘holey dollar’, 1813, struck on a Lima portrait 8 reales of Carlos IV, 1807JP, counterstamped FIVE SHILLINGS, floral base around inner beaded circle about the central hole, legend not inverted but aligned with that of the Spanish coin, rev. remnant of the classic pillars image counterstamped NEW SOUTH WALES 1813 inverted around the inner beaded circle (KM.2.13), some light surface marks on host coin, otherwise about very fine, the countermark very fine, rarely offered for sale in this country and a good example of Australia’s first coin Australia’s first coin is nothing less than an emblem of exploration and discovery. For forty thousand years, only indigenous people inhabited this huge island in the South Pacific, and it was Captain James Cook who first stepped ashore in 1770, claiming the vast uncharted territory for Great Britain. It was an unknown land. Explorers would come over the following decades, slowly forging inland, but in the main Australia was a prison camp focused on a tiny bit of land; England’s courts sent the first cargo of condemned prisoners on a fleet that arrived in 1778 under the command of Arthur Phillip. Eight years before, in Cook’s party, Joseph Banks was aboard Cook’s ship, HMS Endeavour. Banks was a naturalist, so impressed by what he discovered when first arriving at port – plants, insects and animals unknown in Europe – that he dubbed the place Botany Bay. The prisoners being transported from England were less impressed, facing a life of indenture and hardship, and they were deprived of the wonders of Botany Bay when Captain Phillip decided on Port Jackson as the site of their new home. Phillip called the penal colony Sydney Cove in honor of secretary of state Lord Sydney. The colony immediately became a constitutional autocracy under control of a governor selected by a company formed in England in 1789, in effect a military regiment that oversaw the prisoners and other settlers after the royal marines that were part of Phillip’s fleet departed. The ruling company was called The New South Wales Corps. New South Wales was a harsh land. Agriculture was not easily established. Food was in short supply for the original 778 convicts and their keepers. Most of the convicts were professional thieves lacking skills needed to survive in the new land. But most survived and beginning in 1791 ships regularly arrived with additional prisoners, settlers and supplies from England. Slowly, convicts were emancipated and granted plots of land, and trade with the home country began. A whaling industry started, manned in part by retired soldiers and marines. A settler named John MacArthur formed a wool industry which became the colony’s first important source of exports. Several new towns near the original settlement were established by 1815, all engaged in raising sheep. The rum trade became corrupt, ending in a military rule of the colony from 1808 until 1810. The next decade experienced increased immigration of free settlers. By 1825, New South Wales had its own legislative council. A vast new land would soon open up to further exploration and development, and by 1840 the transportation of convicts was abolished. Australians were then all free people. Hard, real money had been a problem since the founding of the colony. During the nineteenth century, scores of independent merchants issued ‘small change’ money, tokens bearing curious images of the land, in large numbers, but the only official money for decades consisted of Spanish silver 8 reales (dollars) out of which the centres were cut and a local value was inscribed by way of counterstamps. These are what we today call the ‘holey dollars’. Unknown quantities of 8 reales struck at various Spanish mints were the host coins, all dated from the middle of the eighteenth century into the early nineteenth century. These were chosen for their proven inherent value, based on their silver content. They became the standard coin for New South Wales. By the condition of most known examples, they were used long and hard, in local trade and for export. When gold was discovered near Bathurst in 1851, much of the population of New South Wales and other districts of the expanding country rushed to the gold fields, and within a year prospecting settlers thronged to the land from abroad. New discoveries of gold opened up more gold fields during the 1850s, and the former penal colony became transformed. Colonies became territories. Intense rivalries grew between territories. Commerce rapidly developed, and gold was its basis. The so-called ‘easy gold’ petered out within a decade of discovery, but mining had become a major industry across the land. The company BHP Billiton, which began in New South Wales as a silver miner in the 1880s, became a major producer of copper and other metals. Sydney became a centre for business. By the end of the nineteenth century, little more than a century after it was discovered by Cook, New South Wales had become one of the commercial focuses of the modern world. Its first money, the holey dollars made from highly valued Spanish silver, had been long forgotten and most had perished in melting pots as unwanted – mere relics of a penal colony that formed the basis for the development of a modern nation.
GERMAN EAST AFRICAN BANKNOTES, BUSH NOTES, Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Bank, one rupie, 1 July 1917, Serie EP (16): nos. 14505; 14489; 15710-12; 15714; 15755; 15780; 15782; 16571; 16574; 16964-5; 16963; 19601; 23166 (all large serial nos. and large eagle), Stelling-Kirst signatures, ‘moja’ on back (Ros.936b; Pick 22b), the last with light staining around edges, otherwise extremely fine to good extremely fine (16)

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534325 Los(e)/Seite