Michael-Roo Posted yesterday at 09:55 AM Posted yesterday at 09:55 AM 1 hour ago, Coinery said: Definitely not the genuine article, but will definitely be the coin in that little group that will catch the highest bidder out, as there’s nothing else in there they could possibly be wanting! Same seller: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/287323936829?itmmeta=01KRX7WT4HCDJK4FW405YX1FA8&hash=item42e5d7583d:g:Zh8AAeSwC1ZqAMTQ 1 Quote
Peckris 2 Posted yesterday at 01:56 PM Posted yesterday at 01:56 PM 4 hours ago, Michael-Roo said: Same seller: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/287323936829?itmmeta=01KRX7WT4HCDJK4FW405YX1FA8&hash=item42e5d7583d:g:Zh8AAeSwC1ZqAMTQ That's supposed to be silver?? 1 Quote
Michael-Roo Posted yesterday at 02:43 PM Posted yesterday at 02:43 PM (edited) 48 minutes ago, Peckris 2 said: That's supposed to be silver?? Possibly silver, I don't know. A genuine Anne farthing? Not likely. 😁 Edited yesterday at 02:46 PM by Michael-Roo Quote
Peckris 2 Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 6 hours ago, Michael-Roo said: Possibly silver, I don't know. A genuine Anne farthing? Not likely. 😁 I'm not an expert on the Anne pattern farthings! Quote
wlewisiii Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago There was a copper farthing in 1714 with Anne on it. According to https://en.numista.com/13073 Quote Only struck in the year of Queen Anne's death (1714), they did not circulate widely, to the extent that rumours started saying that they were of great rarity. Indeed Peck states that they were never officially issued and Spink lists them as Patterns. The following is an excerpt from the Department of Special Collections at the University of Notre Dame Libraries: "In the last year of her reign the London mintmaster, Isaac Newton, oversaw the production of a few farthings, most of which were proofs, but a few may have been made for circulation. These coins were slightly smaller than William's farthings but of a much higher level of craftsmanship. Newton produced a more uniform product with less of a weight range between examples and sharper reliefs on the images." There are no silver pattern coins listed. So, yes, I would say that that was an easily discovered fake and that the seller should be considered unsafe. Quote
Michael-Roo Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago (edited) 2 hours ago, wlewisiii said: There was a copper farthing in 1714 with Anne on it. According to https://en.numista.com/13073 There are no silver pattern coins listed. So, yes, I would say that that was an easily discovered fake and that the seller should be considered unsafe. There are silvers for both 1713 and 1714, but the portrait on the ebay coin is all wrong. Numista is never reliable. https://www.colincooke.com/ccc_queenanne. Edited 7 hours ago by Michael-Roo Quote
Rob Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago Plenty of silver types, of which I am looking for a specific one. Without trying to state the obvious, it has cast copy 'written' all over it in the form of casting pits. Even if it was genuine, desirable it ain't. 1 Quote
Michael-Roo Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 5 hours ago, Rob said: Plenty of silver types, of which I am looking for a specific one. Without trying to state the obvious, it has cast copy 'written' all over it in the form of casting pits. Even if it was genuine, desirable it ain't. I see someone has bought it. Quote
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