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chrislamb

Silver farthing? which king?

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Hi,

Just wondering who the king is on this coin & how much it is worth?

The diamiter is 1cm.

Thanks

Chris

post-32-1144752168_thumb.jpg

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Not much to go on - but - as a stab. I'd say it is a farthing of Richard II or Henry IV. Just going on the crown and hairstyle. A better photograph would help, although the lack of decent legends or mint marks makes any attribution a pure guess! Anyone else on the forum got a better idea? :D

The value depends on accurate identification, but could be from a couple of pounds to £100 or more dependent of king and rarety.

Edited by Geordie582

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Thanks for the reply Geordie got it down to a couple of kings better than going through my Spink coins book, they all look the same at around that period to me!!! Found it metal detecting, I am just interested in value, am much more interested in what period it's from.

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Letter at 3 o'clock looks like a C, i can't see any D knocking around so it might be HENRIC, (rather than RICARD).

I can't narrow it any further than that though.

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On second scrutiny, looking at that nose, it could be Snoopy!! :D

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At 10mm I think you can safely say a farthing! Looking again I think Henry IV is favourite, but it will take an experienced numismatist to atribute it definitely. There is so little to go on! :unsure:

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I asked that as I have a charles I penny which is not a lot bigger than this. Thanks again for the info.

Chris

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Currence debasement made the silver coins gradually deminish in size with succeeding reigns. Some of the Victorian were minute. I'm sure a milled collector could provide an interesting series comparison?? B)

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My guess :-

HENRY VIII Halfpenny.

These often mistaken for farthings because of their size "10 - 13mm".

The legend would be something like -

hxDxGxROS/\xSIExSPIN/\ on the obverse

CIVI T/\S LON DON on the reverse

Where I have typed /\ should be an A but with the bar on the top.

Teg

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I'm inclined to agree with Teg that it's a Henry VIII Halfpenny. I have dropped the pic into paint and reversed the colours and could be persuaded that I can see the ROS^ of the legend at 6 o'clock. Someone will no doubt correct me (please!) but I don't think that legend was used prior to old coppernose's reign.

ROSA.jpg

Making out the H D G is however beyond me so I could be wrong!!

Thanks for the interesting challenge chrislamb! (And good guess Teg!)

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I agree with you Tom, it certainly looks like ROSA to me too., and 5.30 to 6 0-clock is where it would appear. My Wren stops at Henry VII and I was plumping for Spinks 2077 as a result. Hadn't noticed the ROSA!

Edited by Geordie582

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This has started me re-evaluating some of my more obscure coins, such as this one. I have it down as Henry VI (S1886) but now I'm doubting it! The trouble with poor examples, although researching them can be fun, is that they cause so much frustration! :blink:

http://www.omnicoin.com/coins/900147.jpg

Edited by Geordie582

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Here is an even better photo of it, at exactly 3 o'clock there seems to be an H. Thanks for the replies.post-592-1148479470_thumb.jpg

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Here is an even better photo of it, at exactly 3 o'clock there seems to be an H. Thanks for the replies.post-592-1148479470_thumb.jpg

Here is a picture of a henry VIII halfpenny

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If that IS an 'H' at 3-o-clock then it will not be Henry! More like Richard but the legend should read RICARDUS in that case - no H-, so that leaves us with yet another problem :unsure:

What say you, TomGoodHeart?

Edited by Geordie582

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In Spink's Numismatic Circular of October 2004 there's a (H VIII) halfpenny which reads H D G ROSA SIE SPIA and from what I can make out from the photo the E of SIE is at exactly 3 o'clock. Could it be an E rather than an H? I've tried scanning it but can't get a photo that would be any use to you I'm afraid.

(Bear in mind Mike's coin is unusual in having the annulet at the centre of the reverse cross - hence the price)

Edited by TomGoodheart

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I'm giving up on this one! Much the same as the majority of minor coins of this period, there never seems to be a really good example to use as the benchmark :(

I've given up on my coin too! I'm just claiming it to be, as I quoted, Henry VI and let others argue!!! :D

I suggest you do the same, Chrislamb :rolleyes:

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That's why I like Chas I shillings! Most are clear enough to identify, there are plenty of different varieties and a Sylloge of the whole series to guide you. Easy peasy!! :D

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