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A ladies 9ct gold Pinnacle strap watch, a 9ct gold boat shaped ring, a gold twisted wire ring, a 9ct gold tiger's eye ring, a two strand twisted wire ring, a 9ct gold St George medallion/faux coin ring, a 9ct gold identity chain bracelet, a 9ct gold single stone diamond ring, and broken/scrap gold
Box containing assorted, mainly cased, coins to include: Commemorative coin set, King Edward VIII, 1936, in sterling silver; silver birthday crown with certificate, cased; silver gilt commemorative coins to include: Keith Park; Field Marshall Montgommery; Duke of Wellington; The Changing Face of Britain's Coinage collection, boxed; 2008 triple precious metal gemstone double thickness proof coin etc.
LATE NINETEENTH CENTURY 'KOMET' DISC MUSICAL BOX, with coin in the slot operated mechanism, the movement working but sluggish and dirty, playing on combs (complete) in stained walnutwood case with moulded forecolumns flanking the framed door, with milestone shaped glass panel over cash drawer, 30" high x 28 3/4" wide THE WINDING HANDLE and TWENTY 20 1/2" DIAMETER DISCS (rusty)
65-40 BC. Obv: wreath with three crescents and 'turf-cutter' below. Rev: disjointed horse left with quadruple line tail with eye symbol above, large pellets round a 'cross' of pellets above and 'crab' below. S. -; BMC 88-128; ABC 752 variant (no 'cross' above horse). 4.87 grams. The Brodie Hall, Kent, UK collection; acquired Cris Rudd (with envelope and ticket). Chris Rudd (List 52, 31) notes: '.....Chute-Cheriton Transitional staters are scarce rather than rare with 70 recorded by the Celtic Coin Index. However the majority of these are in museums, including 41 in the British Museum; which is why you hardly ever see them in dealer's catalogues....'. Good very fine. Scarce.
50-30 BC. Obv: male bearded head right with pellets for hair and pellets before. Rev: curvy horse left with pellet mane with pellet-centred lozenge above and pellet-in-annulet below. S. 433; BMC 3554; ABC 1549. 1.01 grams. The Brodie Hall, Kent, UK collection; acquired Chris Rudd (with envelope and ticket); found Norfolk, before 2010. Chris Rudd notes: 'The curly head of the Toney Curly Top was copied from a silver coin of the Catuvellauni: Tasciovanus Warrior (VA 1745, BMC 1667-1668). The lozenge above the horse can be seen below the horse of Norfolk God silver units.' Good very fine; full flan. Excessively rare (only five others recorded).
50-40 BC. Obv: centre pellet-in-annulet with four radiating beaded lines with crescents and bear's paws in angles. Rev: horse left, with harness straps and beaded mane, pellet under tail with star in pelletted circle above and large annulet below. S. -; BMC -; ABC 1776. 1.19 grams. The Brodie Hall, Kent, UK collection; acquired Chris Rudd (with envelope and ticket); found Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, 2010. Chris Rudd notes: '....And then came the Torksey Quarter (VA -, BMC -, see Celtic Coin Index 94.0007) which doesn't seem to have any antecedents or any derivatives. It's an odd one-off type which came out of nowhere, didn't go anywhere and quickly disappeared from sight.... The great rarity of the Torksey Quarter may be gauged from the fact that there isn't a single one in the British Museum and that not even the colossal Corieltavian collection of Michael O'Bee had one'. Good very fine; sharply struck. Excessively rare (only two others recorded).
50-30 BC. Obv: eagle standing left, snake in beak with beaded ring below. Rev: small annulate horse right with beaded mane, pellet-in-annulet before and inverted corn ear below. S. -; BMC 653; ABC 2309. 0.46 grams. The Brodie Hall, Kent, UK collection; acquired Chris Rudd (with envelope and ticket). Chris Rudd notes (list 12, number 38): 'The few known examples of this exceedingly scarce type have come mostly from Essex. The horse is early-Trinovantian in style and similar to one on the 'Thatcher Head' Late Whaddon Chase silver unit VA 1558-1. The eagle may be the first to be featured on a British Celtic coin. Van Arsdell attributes two little lightweight silver units to Addedomaros; so this one too may have been issued by him.' [No Reserve] Very fine/good very fine; attractive reverse. Extremely rare (only 15 others recorded).
5 BC-10 AD. Obv: banded flan with wreath motif, two outline crescents at centre, annulet at ends. Rev: full-bodied horse prancing left with beaded mane and long high-arched tail, pellet-in-annulet and [DVBNOVIILLA] above, pellets around and wavy branch and two pellet-in-annulet below. S. 207; BMC 2425-2440; ABC 2392. 5.38 grams. The Brodie Hall, Kent, UK collection; acquired Chris Rudd (with envelope and ticket). Chris Rudd notes: 'Robert Kretz says This stater was struck from an intriguing obverse die. It must have been damaged soon after it was produced, as the dozen or so coins known to originate from it show a greater or lesser degree of surface damage. Yet the interest does not stop there, because this coin also possesses a highly unusual reverse. Although the inscription is off the flan, we can be sure it belongs to my letter II type, so named after the central portion of the inscription DVBNOVIILLA. The letter II type differs from its predecessors in featuring a shortened legend and a more Romanised, elegant horse. Its successors remained essentially the same, except for replacing the letters II with the more modern E. At first glance this reverse looks like an example of the 'star' type (VA 1655), but what you see is in fact the early British form of the letter A. The coin was struck from a rare reverse die which, had it been recorded at the time, would have been listed under class D3-5, dies P21 on page 26 of my study The Trinovantian Staters of Dubnovellaunos, BNJ 78 (2008). Only one other coin is recorded from this reverse die, which is unique within the series for placing the final letter A below, rather than above, the end of the horse's tail. Very fine/near extremely fine; superb horse, large branch. Extremely rare (only one other recorded from this reverse die).
50-30 BC. Obv: long-eared hare bounding right with bird-like head and ringed tail, with pelleted four-spoked wheel behind, pellet-in-annulet and zig-zag line below. Rev: horse left with beaded mane, crescent (lyre?) above, pelleted oval before and pellet-centred six-armed star below. S. 52; BMC 393; ABC 2499. 0.41 grams. The Brodie Hall, Kent, UK collection; acquired Chris Rudd (with envelope and ticket); found near Braughing, east Hertfordshire, 2002. Chris Rudd notes: 'Julius Caesar says the hare was sacred to the Britons and Dio Cassius says Queen Boudica released a hare before fighting the Romans in AD 60. John Evans says the bird-headed hare on this fascinating Celtic coin is apparently pecking at a snake. He could be right. This is one of the most extraordinary creatures to be found on a Celtic coin; deliberately ambiguous and defying definition.' [No Reserve] Very fine; chipped at edge. Very rare.
10-41 AD. Obv: corn ear with no central stalk, CA to eft and MV right. Rev: horse right with pellet and branch above, pellet and CVNO below. S. 287; BMC 1813-1814; ABC 2788 variant (pellet-in-annulet below horse). 5.39 grams. The Brodie Hall, Kent, UK collection; acquired Chris Rudd (with envelope and ticket). The reverse die for this coin shows the pellet above and below the horse typical of the extremely rare Plastic 'B type' (with B before horse) rather than the pellet-in-annulet below horse usually seen; possibly a hybrid or perhaps even an example of the B type as the area in front of the horse is off flan so will have to await matching with another example from the same die where (hopefully) this area is shown. Good very fine. Very rare variant.
10-41 AD. Obv: ear of corn with central stalk with C.A to left and MV right. Rev: 'classic' style horse rearing right with branch above and CVNO on ground line below. S. 288; BMC 1829-1831; ABC 2798 variant (pellet between C.A and no ornament at base of corn stalk). 5.30 grams. The Brodie Hall, Kent, UK collection; acquired Chris Rudd (with envelope and ticket). Chris Rudd notes: 'Rainer Kretz says This particular variant of a 'classic' Cunobelinus stater has a small pellet between the letters C and A, probably some form of privy-mark. The obverse shows the usual corn ear, which has here been stripped of all non-essentials like scrolls and now represents a visually striking regal emblem. Of all the seventeen reverse dies listed in Derek Allen's 'Cunobelin's Gold' published in 1975, this is one of the finest in artistic terms, falling not far short of the slightly later and much sought after left-facing version (VA 2029). It portrays a beautifully proportioned and well-muscled horse rearing up on its hind legs and is clearly the work of a master engraver who may well have been classically trained. When Derek Allen examined Cunobelin's Gold in 1975 he recorded just four coins from the die combination Gh, a number that may have now risen to around twenty. A coin from the same dies was offered in C. Rudd list 88, no. 54. Good very fine; full inscriptions, muscular horse, hairline striking crack at edge. Scarce.
65-64 BC. Alexandria mint. Dated Year 17. Obv: Diademed head of Ptolemy I right, wearing aegis. Rev: BASILEWS PTOLEMAIOY legend with eagle standing left on thunderbolt, wings closed. Date IIZ (Greek Z resembling I) in left field, PA in right field. Svoronos 1865; BMC 33-35; SNG Cop 368. See wildwinds.com, this coin. 13.70 grams. Good very fine.
165-130 BC. Obv: BASILEWS SWTHR MENANDROU legend with diademed bust of Menander left, thrusting spear held in right hand. Rev: Karothsi legend, Athena standing right, holding aegis and brandishing thunderbolt, DFI monogram in left field. BMC 36-37; Whitehead 462-469; Grotefend 46; Bop. 6A; Mitchener MIG 221b; Sear Greek 7604. See wildwinds.com, this coin. 2.41 grams. [No Reserve] Extremely fine.
154-141 BC. Obv: helmeted head of Roma right with X behind. Rev: Victory in galloping biga right, holding whip in right hand and reins in left hand; below, legends S AFRA below, ROMA in exergue. Craw. 206/1; Syd. 388; Bab. (Afrania) 1; BMCRR Rome 670; Sear 85. See wildwinds.com, this coin. 3.76 grams. Extremely fine.
22-23 AD. Antioch ad Orontem (coin) and Laodikeia ad Mare (countermark). Obv: unclear legend around head of Augustus right. Rev: Large SC within wreath, countermarked MP (imitating IMP) in Latin letters, within incuse rectangle, applied 8 years after the death of Augustus. Cf. RPC I 4255-4264 for host coin; Howgego 650; Paris 1104 (countermark). 9.60 grams. [No Reserve] Fair, countermark fine.
17th century AD or later. Obv: NERO CLAVD CAESAR AVG GER P M TR P IMP legend with laureate head right. Rev: AVGVSTI SPQR OST C legend above and beneath a view of the Port of Ostia with seven ships within, lighthouse above surmounted by a statue; the river Tiber reclining left below, holding oar and dolphin. Lawrence, Cavino 18; Montigny 16. Cohen I, p. 187, 95; Cohen I 2nd Edition, p. 281, 38. (The ancient version of this coin has eight ships). 26.28 grams. Near extremely fine.
85-86 AD. Obv: IMP CA D VES F DOM AVG GER COS XII legend with laureate head of Domitian right, with aegis. Countermark of laureate head right (Howgego 46) on neck. Rev: EPI BA AGRI legend around large SC with date ET KS below. RPC II 2272; Meshorer 36; Paris 168. See wildwinds.com, this coin. 4.88 grams. Fine.
Dated 2012 AD. Obv: profile bust with ELIZABETH II D G REG F D TEN POUNDS legend. Rev: Pegasus right with LONDON OLYMPIC GAMES legend and date below; in capsule of issue, with Royal Mint case and certificate. S. 4950; KM# 1227. 952 grams total (coin 156.29 grams, 65mm). Struck in .999 fine silver and limited to maximum 7,500 issued; this coin received the 'Best Contemporary Event Coin' award sponsored by Krause Publications in 2014; examples are being offered retail today at prices in excess of £500. [No Reserve] Proof, FDC.
Dated 1771, 1772, 1774 and 1775 AD. Obvs: the first with GOD SAVE US ALL legend; the others with GEORGIVS III REX legends. Revs: all with Britannia seated and date in exergue, with BRITANNIA. legend. CGCC EH-321a (this coin)/CGCC CH-1772B-3 (this coin)/CGCC CH-1774B-4 (same dies?)/CGCC CH-1775B-4; See Atkins for information on evasions. 6.60, 7.10, 7.83, 6.47 grams. [4] From about fine to very fine; toned.
Dated 1668 AD. Second bust. Obv: profile bust with CAROLVS II DEI GRATIA legend. Rev: cruciform arms with CC monogram in angles with MAG BR FRA ET HIB REX legend and date; with small 'heart over bird' countermark at reverse centre, within cruciform cartouche. S. 3375; ESC 1030. 5.58 grams. Ex DNW sale, Lot 640. [No Reserve] Coin fine; countermark very fine. Interesting.
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172622 item(s)/page