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

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

A customer has sent through these images of some medallions? He is interested as to their authenticity and whether anyone can shed any light on them.

Any help appreciated

post-836-0-14122800-1418326070_thumb.jpe

post-836-0-75707900-1418326080_thumb.jpe

post-836-0-27011700-1418326092_thumb.jpe

post-836-0-40588100-1418326106_thumb.jpe

Edited by Colin G.
Posted

Not a clue what they are apart from the obvious inscriptions.

It would help to know the metal, size and weights. My initial reaction was they might be struck on old coins given the possible trace of legend (3 dots) at 10pm on the last image. If so and also contemporary, these would more likely be foreign given the scarcity of silver in Britain at the time.

It is possible to eliminate English silver as the edge graining is leaning slightly to the left whereas on shillings for example it is either upright in the case of early Chas.2 or diagonal leaning forward in the case of subsequent issues up the the 1816 recoinage.

Posted

The sawdust on the box was pointed out and also gave me some concern about authenticity. But there was a raft of such material at this time, so they could well be genuine. I wondered whether anyone had just seen them as a set before, or had come across them in any reference literature. My literature on such material is almost non-existent. They were pointed out as being "shilling" size, but I have asked the contact for any more information they could provide. The planchet style/size look similar to some of the spade guinea/hanover tokens

Posted

They appear very crude and nothing like the Wellington tokens.

Obviously manufactured after Trafalger ......England expects etc.

Posted

BRG might be your man, he collects this sort of stuff

I would suggest bagerap might be a better bet. BRG does regular tokens whereas these are definitely medallions.

They could be restruck from tokens as these could be considered throw away items if outside the period when they circulated locally. The surfaces look a bit tin-like, which would exclude most genuine coinage flans.

Posted

A white metal/silver set sold in the last week or so. Went to Australia I believe, I'll try to dig out the details.

Pies, when was that Baldwins? I've recently bought an example of lot 3046, and I'd like to check the hammer price.

Posted

Thanks for the input guys, it looks like the same contact from your thread on coin community that has approached me.

Posted

I'm not sure that they're right.

If they were struck from the original dies as a second line product, they'd have been a pretty close match. I think that there's maybe a few variables I wouldn't expect to see.

If made as a contemporary copy, you would expect differences in type face and positioning. These look too close for that and I'm wondering if they're maybe a modern copy?

1418395226_1561174752_aboukirhorz.jpgUploaded at Snapagogo.com

1418395232_1162177498_aboukirvert.jpgUploaded at Snapagogo.com

Posted

OK, this makes everything clear, all the denticles match up to all the right places. These are the real aftermarket medallions, made from pewter. And in common with the silver, gilt bronze and brass versions are listed as rare, which in this case means a reasonable population. A cased set of four is very rare however. These should fetch in the order of £55-75 as singles and whatever the market will bear as a set of three.

The box however I do not trust.

1418406039_766888710_copenjoint.jpgUploaded at Snapagogo.com

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