I just agreed to a swap which will acquire me this ca. 1623-24 British gold Laurel of King James I. King James is of course famous for commissioning the English translation of the Bible which bears his name to this day. With about $4,350 in trade goods on my end of the deal, this coin is to date my most expensive acquisition, though I do have one US coin (an MS66 Saint-Gaudens double-eagle) which is worth a tiny bit more on paper. I swapped a 2003 USA 1-ounce gold Eagle, PCGS MS70 (essentially boring modern bullion) and an 1895 Puerto Rico peso, PCGS MS61 (a very nice coin which I liked but didn't absolutely love). No cash out of my pocket, which was nice. All told I had $4,350 in the pair. Atlas Numismatics was originally asking $4,695 for the Laurel. Prior to this, the most I had ever paid for a coin was about $3,800 (for my 1799 Bust dollar). I find hammered gold exciting, and to have a piece of big hammered gold, all the more so. Here is the Atlas description on the Laurel:
Rob, that’s a fantastic addition! It’s especially great that it came from a simple trade. Congrats! I just have a shilling. James I (1603 - 1625 A.D.) AR Shilling O:· IACOBVS · D’ · G’ · MAG’ · BRIT’ · FRA’ · ET · HIB’ · REX ·, third bust right, crowned and mantled; XII (denomination) to left. R: .EXVRGAT. DEVS. DISSIPENTVR. INIMICI., coat-of-arms. MM: lis Tower (London) mint 30mm 6.17g North 2099; SCBC 2654.
Great portrait on that shilling, even if he does look a little sleepy there. Those are impressively large.
A beautiful coin and sounds like you made a very satisfying trade deal to improve your overall collection.
Wow, Lord... that was a great trade for a great piece! And you are right - it is big! Far more interesting than an Eagle ouncer!