Edward York mint penny

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by clanger, Feb 11, 2022.

  1. clanger

    clanger Well-Known Member

    Hope you all don't think I'm forever finding hammered coins, because I don't! Just been 'really', really, lucky. So this little gem is another head scratcher. It's definitely York mint, but once again I can't work out the king, apart from it being Edward!:happy:
    I've been so impressed by you guys and your knowledge regarding these coins, but try as I might, I can't figure out the difference in crowns, lettering etc. So over to you!
    Many thanks as ever. obverse York penny.JPG reverse York penny.JPG
     
    Edessa, TheRed, scottishmoney and 4 others like this.
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  3. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    EI(1272-1307) Civitas Eboraci - York.
     
    +VGO.DVCKS and Broucheion like this.
  4. +VGO.DVCKS

    +VGO.DVCKS Well-Known Member

    From here, the portrait style looks like one of the late classes; my guess would be c. 1290s-1300s. Nice one, though; the quatrefoil specifically indicates the mint of the Archbishop. Durham does the same thing; both had royal and ecclesiastical issues, often simultaneously. This level of autonomy, even as late as Edward, was owing to their status as 'palatine' archbishoprics; near enough the Scottish border to give the archbishops more administrative (and military) authority than the ones nearer London and Canterbury.
     
  5. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    Actually I believe there was an ecclesiastical mint as late as HVIII - until he went to war with the then established faith because he couldn't get a convenient dispensation for his marital deficiencies. It might have been Durham, but I will have to check on it.
     
    +VGO.DVCKS likes this.
  6. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    @+VGO.DVCKS Good catch on the ecclesiastical mint - I missed that quatrefoil in the centre of the piece and just read the outer legends.
     
    +VGO.DVCKS likes this.
  7. TheRed

    TheRed Well-Known Member

    @+VGO.DVCKS is right, it is from the ecclesiastical mint at York. Looks like class 9b or one of the other sub classes from 9.
     
    +VGO.DVCKS and dltsrq like this.
  8. dltsrq

    dltsrq Grumpy Old Man

    North notes only 3ef and 9b for the York archiepiscopal mint.
     
    +VGO.DVCKS likes this.
  9. +VGO.DVCKS

    +VGO.DVCKS Well-Known Member

    I really need how deeply collaborative this whole process was! This is what the forum should look like more of the time. @TheRed, brilliant call on the class.
    Edit: @scottishmoney, you're right about Henry VIII. Some of those issues have the archbishop's initials in the fields. This goes back at least to Edward IV, but with H VIII, you get some of the famous ones leading up to the Reformation; Cranmer, for instance.
     
    Edessa likes this.
  10. clanger

    clanger Well-Known Member

    Thanks to all for the info, much appreciated:)
     
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