craigy Posted November 6, 2017 Posted November 6, 2017 (edited) All found in the same field over 3 years, England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales bottom middle Richard I Canterbury, Left William The Lion, Middle top Henry III Dublin, right Richard I/John Rhuddlan Wales Edited November 6, 2017 by craigy 3 Quote
IanB Posted November 6, 2017 Posted November 6, 2017 Forgive my ignorance, but what are the dates of these coins and is it common to find a coin from all 4 corners in the same field or would that be rare. Was the field a site of importance such as an old market or something similar? Quote
craigy Posted November 9, 2017 Author Posted November 9, 2017 On 11/6/2017 at 8:57 PM, IanB said: Forgive my ignorance, but what are the dates of these coins and is it common to find a coin from all 4 corners in the same field or would that be rare. Was the field a site of importance such as an old market or something similar? Rhuddlan is a scarce mint being the only welsh mint other than where the royal mint strike coins today in Llantrisant, they date between 1190 to 1272 roughly, yes i believe it was some kind of market or medieval deer park, not sure if its common to find them all on one field but i just thought it was rather interesting Quote
Gaz T Posted November 9, 2017 Posted November 9, 2017 Every field is like one big lucky bag, you just never know what you are going to get. lovely finds, well done. Quote
jelida Posted November 9, 2017 Posted November 9, 2017 4 hours ago, craigy said: Rhuddlan is a scarce mint being the only welsh mint other than where the royal mint strike coins today in Llantrisant, In fact there were coins minted at Swansea and Cardiff, and Pembroke post 1066 to the Anarchy, possibly also Abergavenny, and of course Aberystwyth under Charles I. My father has a good collection of the latter. The Norman coins are all excessively rare. Jerry Quote
craigy Posted November 10, 2017 Author Posted November 10, 2017 14 hours ago, jelida said: In fact there were coins minted at Swansea and Cardiff, and Pembroke post 1066 to the Anarchy, possibly also Abergavenny, and of course Aberystwyth under Charles I. My father has a good collection of the latter. The Norman coins are all excessively rare. Jerry yr right lol, need to be sure of my facts in future haha Quote
davetmoneyer Posted November 10, 2017 Posted November 10, 2017 Also not forgetting Rhuddygors Castle in the reign of William II struck for LLewellyn, and Dovey Furnace in the latter years of Charles I 1 Quote
craigy Posted November 11, 2017 Author Posted November 11, 2017 On 11/10/2017 at 1:49 PM, davetmoneyer said: Also not forgetting Rhuddygors Castle in the reign of William II struck for LLewellyn, and Dovey Furnace in the latter years of Charles I ok lol, enough haha, i look like a right pratt with my previous statement Quote
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