Just received Newark siege coin back from NGC

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by calcol, Mar 25, 2026 at 8:08 PM.

  1. calcol

    calcol Supporter! Supporter

    Silver coins were issued in Newark by supporters of Charles I during the English civil war. During the war, various walled cities stayed loyal to Charles. Although Newark was besieged by the Parliamentarians for years, it was never conquered. However, when Charles lost the war (and eventually his head), Newark opened its gates again.

    To provide a medium of exchange within the city, nobles donated their silverware to be made into coins. There was no melting and pouring silver into planchets. Instead, the silver objects were hammered flat, then cut into diamond-shaped planchets. The planchets were placed between dies which were hammered to make coins. On some of the coins, original hallmarks of the silverware can be seen. Four denominations (half-crown, shilling, 9 pence and 6 pence) were issued 1645-6.

    The coin below is a shilling (12 pence). On one side is a crown, the initials CR (Carolus Rex [Charles the King]), and the denomination (XII). The other side of the coin has the name of the city and date. Then there is the mysterious “OBS”. It’s an abbreviation for “obsidional”, an obscure English adjective which means “associated with a siege” … very appropriate.

    I acquired the coin in a St. James (a British auction house) auction raw and graded by them as about VF. Very pleased it came back from NGC as XF40.

    Mike
    Great_Britain_shilling_1646_Newark_NGC_xf40_low_res.jpg
     
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  3. BuffaloHunter

    BuffaloHunter Short of a full herd Supporter

    That’s a cool piece, Mike! Thanks for the history, too.
     
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  4. Tall Paul

    Tall Paul Supporter! Supporter

    Very nice, I would gladly add a historical piece like that to my collection.
     
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  5. geekpryde

    geekpryde Husband and Father Moderator

    Cool! My wife is a history nut, so I will have to show her this.
     
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  6. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Very nice grade and a super coin, one that is not often seen. Congratulations on the addition to your collection.
     
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  7. Jersey magic man

    Jersey magic man Supporter! Supporter

    Thanks for the history lesson. Fascinating facts.
     
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  8. BRandM

    BRandM Counterstamp Collector

    I love siege and emergency money. I have four "Leopard and Palm" tokens issued by the Irish city of Cork (spelled Corke) during and before the Glorious Revolution of 1688 / 1690. They have devices counterstamped over smoothed merchant tokens of William Ballard who was the city's mayor in 1690.

    Another is a badly damaged copper (?) disc...probably a unidentifiable coin... stamped "Corke" in a cross-like depression. There's not enough detail left to identify it. It was apparently dug because it's heavily damaged from exposure. Interesting pieces as is yours. I'll try to post some pictures later.

    Bruce
     
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  9. Joshua Lemons

    Joshua Lemons Well-Known Member Supporter

    Nice. I only have one siege coin from Minden. Very interesting types of coins but often too pricey for my budget.
     
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