Test Jump to content
The British Coin Forum - Predecimal.com

Recommended Posts

Posted

I'm not sure what this is, or whether it is brass or some kind of gold.

If anyone can shed a little light I'd appreciate it.

leevan

post-20-1070808651_thumb.jpg

Posted

Not sure what it is but if it were gold it would be pretty heavy. Looks brass to me, and with a hole in I wouldn't have thought it would be worth a great deal (unless it is gold?!)

Chris

www.predecimal.com

Posted

I think I'd agree with it being brass. As far as I am aware, gold being a 'noble' metal doesn't oxidise very easily whereas it is obvious that the coin IS doing.

Verdigris if I recall correctly.

Posted

This is an anti-Catholic medal struck in England in 1678. The obverse features an image of Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey who was murdered on 12th October 1678. Though the murder went unsolved, it was popularly believed to have been perpetrated by Catholics (Godfrey was an active opponent of pro-Catholic reform). The reverse copies an earlier Dutch or German design popular during the Wars of Religion, and features an image of the Pope which, when reversed, becomes an image of the Devil. The legend "ECCLESIA PERVERSA TENET FACIEM DIABOLI" translates as "the Church subverted takes on the appearance of the Devil".

These medals were designed by George Bower and struck in both silver and brass. The brass medal appears in Michael Mitchener's "Jetons, Medalets and Tokens of the Low Countries and France" reference 3032. Mitchener, writing in 1991, values the medal at £35 in Very Fine condition.

Posted
These medals were designed by George Bower and struck in both silver and brass. The brass medal appears in Michael Mitchener's "Jetons, Medalets and Tokens of the Low Countries and France" reference 3032. Mitchener, writing in 1991, values the medal at £35 in Very Fine condition.

[ASIDE]...George Bower was also responsibly for the 1689 half guinea, and some of the William and Mary Halfpenny and farthings. The coins he designed often had rather comical portraits... :D

Sylvester.

Posted
This is an anti-Catholic medal struck in England in 1678. The obverse features an image of Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey who was murdered on 12th October 1678. Though the murder went unsolved, it was popularly believed to have been perpetrated by Catholics (Godfrey was an active opponent of pro-Catholic reform). The reverse copies an earlier Dutch or German design popular during the Wars of Religion, and features an image of the Pope which, when reversed, becomes an image of the Devil. The legend "ECCLESIA PERVERSA TENET FACIEM DIABOLI" translates as "the Church subverted takes on the appearance of the Devil".

These medals were designed by George Bower and struck in both silver and brass. The brass medal appears in Michael Mitchener's "Jetons, Medalets and Tokens of the Low Countries and France" reference 3032. Mitchener, writing in 1991, values the medal at £35 in Very Fine condition.

That's very interesting. I'll keep it as an oddity (along with your explanation). Did it originally have the hole or was that added later?

Posted

Mitchener's book has a photograph of the medal without the piercing, so it was presumably added later for wearing.

Posted

You people are so super!

Thanks for coming together here.

Chris

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...
Test