mike79 Posted November 30, 2010 Posted November 30, 2010 HI Guys, need help with this coin, it is a metal detector find from Poland, cant find similar in Spink, many thanks. Quote
Peckris Posted November 30, 2010 Posted November 30, 2010 HI Guys, need help with this coin, it is a metal detector find from Poland, cant find similar in Spink, many thanks.Spink only covers British coins - you need a specialist Polish publication (unable to help you there).Educated guesses / clues :It's a standard medieaval long cross reverse type probably common across the Continent. One part of reverse legend reads MONETA which is standard at that time. On the obverse, the chappie looks as though he is wearing a bishop's thingy rather than a crown. Quote
mike79 Posted November 30, 2010 Author Posted November 30, 2010 Thanks Peckris for help, I'm sure on 100% it isn't a Polish coin, look almost like early English hammered coins, maybe it just a fake? Anyway once again thanks for help. Quote
Peter Posted December 1, 2010 Posted December 1, 2010 It is Irish...I have a couple of examples but I'm no expert. Quote
mike79 Posted December 1, 2010 Author Posted December 1, 2010 It is Irish...I have a couple of examples but I'm no expert.Thanks Peter for reply, is any chance to get more information about this coin?, I tried to find more information on the Internet, but it seems that the Irish coins from this period are rare,I found just a few examples, but none matches this one. Quote
Peter Posted December 1, 2010 Posted December 1, 2010 Irish and Scottish coins demand a premium...because they are rare and too many collectors are after these...especially the Scots and Irish.I always look for Bury coins as this is my home town and will pay over the odds for nice examples.Some of the rarer mints I will go for....forget London & Canterbury. Quote
DaveG38 Posted December 1, 2010 Posted December 1, 2010 It is Irish...I have a couple of examples but I'm no expert.Are you sure its Irish? I appreciate that the triangle suggests that it is, but the portrait certainly looks like a religious type (bishop?) rather than the usual king's portrait. I also can't find this coin anywhere in Coincraft's Standard Catalogue of Irish coins, nor do any of the coins (I think) have 'Moneta' in the reverse legend, or the curious 6 pointed stars. If it's not Irish, it looks to me as though the obverse legend starts with TEOD, presumably Theodore or Theodisius or some such? Moneta, presumably meaning money is Monedas in Spanish and Monete in Italian, so I wonder if this is a European coin of medieval age, maybe Theodore Svetoslav of Bulgaria, which might correlate well with it being found in Poland.Anybody got any other ideas? Quote
mike79 Posted December 1, 2010 Author Posted December 1, 2010 And the mystery of that coin is solved:http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/opac/search/cataloguedetail.html?&priref=112750&_function_=xslt&_limit_=10Thank You All for help Quote
DaveG38 Posted December 1, 2010 Posted December 1, 2010 And the mystery of that coin is solved:http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/opac/search/cataloguedetail.html?&priref=112750&_function_=xslt&_limit_=10Thank You All for helpWell done that man!! Quote
declanwmagee Posted December 1, 2010 Posted December 1, 2010 And the mystery of that coin is solved:http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/opac/search/cataloguedetail.html?&priref=112750&_function_=xslt&_limit_=10Thank You All for helpyours is better than theirs though, Mike! Quote
Peckris Posted December 1, 2010 Posted December 1, 2010 And the mystery of that coin is solved:http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/opac/search/cataloguedetail.html?&priref=112750&_function_=xslt&_limit_=10Thank You All for helpyours is better than theirs though, Mike!Hey, I got the bishopy part right! Nowt wrong with an educated flail in the dark Quote
Peter Posted December 2, 2010 Posted December 2, 2010 I stand corrected...there were a lot of imitators of our silver coins. Quote
Peckris Posted December 2, 2010 Posted December 2, 2010 I stand corrected...there were a lot of imitators of our silver coins. Or maybe WE imitated THEIRS? After all, those were the days of a pan-European culture, with every tinpot king or queen answerable to some pontiff in Avignon or Rome. Quote
moneyer12 Posted December 23, 2010 Posted December 23, 2010 it's almost identical to my edward I irish penny. Quote
HistoryTreasures Posted December 23, 2010 Posted December 23, 2010 They were known as "easterlings", from which is derived the word "sterling" which is another term for our silver. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.