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Foreign Coins and Medals, India, Victoria, Royal Mint patterns: ¼ anna; ½ pice; 1/12 anna, 1861, crowned bust l., rev. value, country and date within floral border (KM.467/466/465; S&W.4.160/4.174/4.182), certified and graded by NGC as Proof 63 Brown; Proof 58 Brown and Proof 62 Brown respectively (3)
Foreign Coins and Medals, China/Germany, Li Huang Chang (1823–1901), official visit to Hamburg, silvered-bronze medal, 1896, facing bust wearing large hat, legend in Chinese around, rev. LI HUNG CHANG – BESUCH HAMBURG IM JUNI 1896, arms of Hamburg with lion supporters, 40mm. (L&M.935; Wurz.5175), certified and graded by NGC as Mint State 64 Li Huang Chang (Li Hongzhang) a Chinese politician, general and diplomat, served in important positions in the Qing imperial court. His military mistakes included support of Russia against the Japanese, but he was praised for his success in quelling the Taiping Rebellion. He was very much a pioneer of China’s military and industrial modernisation. He toured Canada, the USA and the West in 1896, attending the coronation of Nicholas II, and in England attended the Royal Naval Fleet Review at Spithead. His efforts in resolving the Boxer Rebellion proved to be his final diplomatic mission.
Islamic Coins, Arab Sasanian, Khusraw II type, silver drachm, Dimashq, 73h, Sasanian bust type with Pahlavi legends, rev. fire altar and attendants with mint to the l. and the date to the r. in Arabic, wt. 3.77gms. (Walker p. 23: NI; SICA 1.279; Eshragh 139; A.D6), fully struck up on obverse and reverse, extremely fine and extremely rare
British Coins and Medals, Anglo Saxon, pale gold phase, c. 650-675, pale gold thrymsa, Two Emperors type (Type II, T.v), diademed bust r., crude legend around, rev. two small busts facing, holding two orbs between them, above, Victory with wings enfolding the figures (S.767; N.20; Sutherland 31-44, SCBI.63, no 30), about extremely fine, of the highest gold content, very rare Found in Kent (PAS reported).
British Coins and Medals, Victoria, proof crown in pure silver, 1847, edge plain, ‘Gothic’ bust l., rev. crowned cruciform shields (S.3883; ESC.291A [R6]; Bull 2580), nearly as struck, a brilliant Proof with reflective surfaces showing scattered abrasions but almost none touching the portrait, with a blush of delicate pinkish gold toning Very little is known or has been recorded about this unusual piece, struck not in the standard silver alloy but in nearly pure silver, which surely accounts for the noted abrasions in a softer metal than was the norm: doubtless mistaken over the years for the usual Gothic issue, and consequently not well handled when being examined. In English Silver Coinage, Alan Rayner simply noted that it was made for presentation purposes, giving no other detail. But was it really? Was it more likely a trial striking made to test the alloy? The rarity rating of R6 suggests that only 3 or 4 pieces are known. If this was in fact made for VIPs, wouldn’t there be more? If a trial piece, that sounds about right. Lacking documents, we will likely never know for certain. Of course, the crown preceded the Gothic-style florin, first struck in 1851, bearing the obverse legend of the crown but with the date not moved to the reverse, as on the crown. And here we encounter a curious controversy that may, possibly, have begun with the legend used on the crown, where the national name in Latin is abbreviated just slightly, so as to fit the space. On the florin, this was further abbreviated to just ‘brit’ for 1851, then changed to ‘britt’ beginning in 1868. Again, space did not permit the name in full. But the first abbreviation used on the florin was technically incorrect, as C. E. Challis points out (A New History of the Royal Mint, page 511): ‘Wyon had had to proceed under the watchful supervision of the queen and the prince consort, and visits to Osborne and Buckingham Palace had been necessary before the queen gave her approval. On one point there was later public controversy: the doubling of the T of BRITT in the inscription on the obverse. Here the classical scholarship of the chancellor himself had saved the Mint from error, but lesser minds failed to understand the application of the Latin rule that the final consonant of an abbreviation should be doubled when necessary to indicate the plural.’ Victoria’s bronzes first struck in 1860 all use the proper BRITT abbreviation. The two versions appear only within the Gothic florin series, and the legends are perfectly proportional on the Gothic crowns, but at some time beginning in the late 1840s the ‘controversy’ briefly occurred. Was young Victoria part of it? Was Prince Albert? Both provided ‘watchful supervision’, Challis declared. Was this ‘pure silver’ Gothic crown one of the VIP pieces shown to the royal couple? Was it a trial piece specially minted in pure silver for their inspection? Could it be that Victoria herself held this very coin, upon which her approval rested? After all, she was the ultimate VIP.
Foreign Coins and Medals, Italy, Milan, Galeazzo Maria Sforza (1466-1476), gold ducat, undated, cuirassed bust r. rev. helmeted arms, dividing the letters GZ and M, wt. 3.51gms. (Crippa 3; Mor 4; Fr.688), a fine Renaissance portrait, minor scratches in reverse field, otherwise good very fine and rare
British Coins and Medals, Charles II, two guineas, 1664, first laur. bust r., rev. crowned cruciform shields, sceptres in angles (S.3333), certified and graded by PCGS as Extremely Fine 45 *ex St. James’s Auction 37, 27 June 2016, lot 43 The variety without the elephant below the bust is exceedingly rare
Irish Coins, Ireland, George II, proof farthing, 1737, struck in silver, laureate bust l., reads GEORGIUS, rev. crowned harp, date below (S.6608; D&F.559), a hint of double-striking on reverse with ghosted numerals to date, good extremely fine, steel grey tone, extremely rare With old dealer’s ticket.
A Porcelain Tea Cup and Saucer, in memorium of George III, January 29th 1820, printed in black with a tomb above a laurel wreath; A Two-Handled Vase, decorated with a portrait bust of Prince Albert; A Sunderland Lustre Tea Cup and Saucer, in memorium of Princess Charlotte; A Queen Victoria Diamond Jubilee Plate, and four other pieces of commemorative wares. (10)
A Pearlware Pottery Plate, possibly Leeds pottery, printed in black with bust portraits of George IV and Charlotte and inscribed "A King Revered, a Queen Beloved, Long May They Live", with a geometric and floral border, 20cm diameter; A French Pottery Plate, printed in black with Queen Victoria and Prince Albert at the opening of the Great Exhibition, 1851, 21cm diameter. (2)
Caracalla Æ Sestertius. Rome, AD 215. M AVREL ANTONINVS PIVS AVG GERM, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right / P M TR P XVIII [IMP III] COS IIII P P, Isis standing right, holding sistrum and presenting grain ears to Caracalla standing left, holding reversed spear, foot on crocodile between. BMCRE 287; C. 334; RIC 544. 18.25g, 31mm, 7h. Near Mint State. Ex E. P. Nicolas Collection, Maison Platt, 9-10 March 1982, lot 597. This type records the infamous visit of Caracalla to Alexandria, the capital of the province of Egypt. Since the conclusion of his campaign against the Alamanni in 213-4, it had become apparent that the emperor was unhealthily obsessed with the great Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great. At this point he appears to have begun openly emulating Alexander in his personal style. Indeed, Cassius Dio (78.7-78.23) relates that “he was so enthusiastic about Alexander that he used certain weapons and cups which he believed had once been his, and he also set up many likenesses of him both in the camps and in Rome itself. He organised a phalanx, composed entirely of Macedonians, sixteen thousand strong, named it ‘Alexander's phalanx’, and equipped it with the arms that warriors had used in his day.” Caracalla’s visit in 215 to Alexandria while on his way east should then have been a happy occasion. However the emperor, “hearing that he was ill-spoken of and ridiculed by them for various reasons, not the least of which was the murder of his brother... concealing his wrath and pretending that he longed to see them... first greeted [the leading citizens] cordially... and then put them to death. Then, having arrayed his whole army, he marched into the city, after first notifying all the inhabitants to remain at home and after occupying all the streets and all the roofs as well. And, to pass over the details of the calamities that then befell the wretched city, he slaughtered so many persons that he did not even venture to say anything about their number, but wrote to the senate that it was of no interest how many of them or who had died, since all had deserved to suffer this fate.”
Marcus Aurelius AV Aureus. Rome, December AD 166-167. M ANTONINVS AVG ARM PARTH MAX, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right / TR P XXI IMP IIII COS III, Victory advancing left, holding wreath in right hand and palm branch over left shoulder. RIC 174; C. 883; Calicó 1995. 7.31g, 21mm, 12h. Fleur De Coin. Despite later tendencies to view the reign of Marcus Aurelius as a golden age of peace and prosperity, in truth it was neither of these things. The years prior to the striking of this coinage had witnessed a successful invasion of Parthian territory that ensured peace with Parthia for many years, but the returning legionaries brought with them a terrible disease that would come to be known as the Antonine Plague, or the Plague of Galen, which may have been either smallpox or measles. This epidemic may have claimed the life of Lucius Verus, and lasted for some fifteen years. In all, some five million Romans are believed to have died from the plague, with the historian Cassius Dio recording that it had a mortality rate of about one in four, and at its height it caused up to two thousand deaths a day in Rome. As much as a third of the population of some areas was wiped out, and the Roman army too was severely depleted by the plague. In 166 the Lombards invaded Pannonia, and though they were swiftly defeated, Dacia too was invaded, and conflict erupted on the Danube frontier with the Marcomanni tribe. 167, the year this coin was struck, saw the Marcomanni incursion win a decisive victory over a Roman army of 20,000 at Carnuntum. They proceeded to raze Opitergium and besiege Aquileia, destroying aqueducts and irrigation conduits and routing a Roman relief army; the Pax Romana that had lasted since the days of Augustus had come to an abrupt end. Vandals and Sarmatians continued their attacks against the province of Dacia, and the Costoboci invaded Moesia, Macedonia and Greece, sacking the sanctuary of Eleusis near Athens. Though the invaders would ultimately all be repulsed through Marcus Aurelius’ efforts, the Romans suffered at least two serious defeats and the empire, already ravaged by the plague, was now severely weakened. On the coinage, the victory types of previous years were repeated in 167, but it would take the rest of Marcus Aurelius’ life and near-constant military campaigning to re-establish a measure of stability on the empire’s Germanic frontiers.
Marcus Aurelius, as Caesar, AV Aureus. Struck under Antoninus Pius. Rome, AD 146-147. AVRELIVS CAESAR AVG PII F, bare-headed and draped bust right / TR POT COS II, Minerva standing right, holding spear in right hand, left hand on shield set on ground. RIC 435a (Pius); Strack 170; Calicó 1923; BMCRE 613 (Pius). 7.11g, 20mm, 6h. Good Very Fine. Rare; only three examples in CoinArchives.
Cn. Lentulus AR Denarius. Spanish (?) mint, 76-75 BC. Diademed and draped bust of Genius Populi Romani right, with sceptre over shoulder; G•P•R above / Sceptre topped with wreath, globe and rudder; EX to left, S•C to right, CN•LEN•Q in exergue. Crawford 393/1a; RSC Cornelia 54. 3.85g, 19mm, 7h. Near Mint State. High relief with golden highlights. Ex Gorny & Mosch 228, 9 March 2015, lot 406; Purchased from Numismatica Varesi, December 1989.
Indo-Greek Kingdom, Philoxenos Aniketos AR Tetradrachm. Circa 125-110 BC. BAΣIΛEΩΣ ANIKHTOY ΦΙΛOΞENOY, diademed heroic bust left, seen from behind, aegis on shoulder and brandishing spear with right hand / 'Maharajasa apadihatasa Philasinasa' in Kharosthi, Philoxenos, in military attire, on horse rearing right; Σ and monogram to lower right. Bopearachchi 7A; SNG ANS 1197. 9.76g, 26mm, 1h. Good Very Fine. Extremely Rare; the rarest of Philoxenos’ bust types and and perhaps the finest known in terms of surface quality.
M. Plaetorius M. f. Cestianus AR Denarius. Rome, 69 BC. Bust of Ceres right, hair gathered in net; jug behind / Winged caduceus; M•PLAETORI downwards to right; CEST•EX•S•C downwards to left. Crawford 405/3b; RSC Plaetoria 6. 3.92g, 18mm, 5h. Good Very Fine. Scarce. Ex José Manso Pinheiro Collection, ANP 133, May 2014, lot 25.
Constantius II AV Solidus. Thessalonica, AD 337-340. FL IVL CONSTANTIVS P F AVG, laurel and rosette-diademed, draped and cuirassed bust right / VICTORIA DD NN AVGG, Victory advancing left, holding trophy in right hand and palm branch in left; TES in exergue. RIC 26; C. 261; Depeyrot 4/2 (misdescribed). 4.70g, 21mm, 5h. Near Mint State.
Octavian AR Denarius. Italian mint (Rome?), autumn 30 - summer 29 BC. Laureate bust of Octavian right, as Jupiter Terminus; thunderbolt behind / Octavian seated left on curule chair, togate and holding Victory in right hand; IMP CAESAR across fields. RIC 270; CRI 427; RSC 116. 3.93g, 21mm, 2h. Near Mint State. Struck on a flan of sound, lustrous metal. Among the finest known examples of this beautiful type.
Indo-Greek Kingdom, Strato I Soter AR Tetradrachm. Circa 105-85/0 BC. BAΣIΛEΩΣ EΠIΦANOYΣ ΣΩTHPOΣ ΣTPATΩNOΣ, helmeted, draped and cuirassed bust right, wearing crested helmet adorned with bull’s horn and ear / ‘Maharajasa pracachasa dhramikasa Stratasa’ in Kharosthi, Athena Alkidemos advancing left, brandishing thunderbolt and aegis; monogram to right. Bopearachchi 28A; HGC 12, 335. 9.69g, 25mm, 12h. Extremely Fine. Exceptional condition for the issue. Extremely Rare.
Marcus Aurelius, as Caesar, AV Aureus. Struck under Antoninus Pius. Rome, AD 147-148. AVRELIVS CAESAR AVG PII F, bare-headed and draped bust right / TR POT II COS II, Fides standing facing, head right, holding grain ears and plate of fruits.RIC 440b (Pius); C. 610; BMCRE 641; Calicó 1926. 7.04g, 20mm, 6h. Very Fine.
Maurice Tiberius AV Solidus. Constantinople, AD 583-602. D N MAVRC TIb P P AV, helmeted, draped and cuirassed bust facing, holding globus cruciger / VICTORIA AVGG H, angel standing facing, holding long staff surmounted by staurogram and globus cruciger; CONOB in exergue. DOC 5h; MIBE 6; Sear 478. 4.37g, 23mm, 6h. Good Extremely Fine.
Domitian Æ Sestertius. Rome, AD 85. IMP CAES DOMIT AVG GERM COS XI CENS PER P P, laureate bust right, wearing aegis / Domitian standing right, clasping hands over altar with officer standing left; behind officer, one soldier with standard, and one soldier at right with spear and shield;SC in exergue. RIC 402; C -; BMCRE -; Peus 371, 369. 26.81g, 37mm, 6h. Very Fine. Extremely Rare.
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110041 item(s)/page