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<p>[QUOTE="+VGO.DVCKS, post: 7655444, member: 110504"]What nudged me to start this was revisiting a suggestion by [USER=87080]@TheRed[/USER], in a thread where it obviously (and consensually) didn't belong. To quote his post:</p><p><br /></p><p>"Anglo-Gallic coins have a wide range varieties for some of the issues it makes it real exercise in fly specking. That is especially true for the coins of Edward III. Some of his issues are known by a handful of coins.</p><p><br /></p><p>"I'd love to see your examples, you should definitely post them to the forum. We need some Anglo-Gallic post on here. The FILI REGIS deniers are some of my favorite Anglo Gallic coins, they have such a great lion on the obverse."</p><p><a href="https://www.cointalk.com/threads/ancient-medieval-coins-canada-amcc-3.368777/page-2#post-4968867" class="internalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="https://www.cointalk.com/threads/ancient-medieval-coins-canada-amcc-3.368777/page-2#post-4968867">https://www.cointalk.com/threads/ancient-medieval-coins-canada-amcc-3.368777/page-2#post-4968867</a></p><p><br /></p><p>Here are the ones I have, apart from a Richard I which was posted elsewhere (with only mild hyperbole) the day before yesterday. (...I don't even know if Elias, for one, counted later issues of Calais as part of the series. --Although Duplessy does include them in his <u>Monnaies Feodales</u>.)</p><p>[ATTACH=full]1316095[/ATTACH]</p><p>[ATTACH=full]1316096[/ATTACH]</p><p>Duchy of Aquitaine. Henry II as Duke in right of Eleanor of Aquitaine, 1154-1189. Obv. +hENRICVS REX. Rev. +AQVI[/]TANI[/]E. Annulets to either side of the initial crosslet and terminal 'E'.</p><p>(From here, this is Duplessy 1030.)</p><p>...Then, with apologies, here's the first and worse of my examples of the future Edward I as Duke. (Finally turned up, unlabelled, in one of my 'junk' files.)</p><p>[ATTACH=full]1316100[/ATTACH]</p><p>Edward as Duke, prior to his coronation, 1252-1272 (likely continued --my guess-- prior to his arrival back in England and formal investment in 1274).</p><p>Obv. Lion (--promise you, theRed was right; it's a cool lion, when you can see it).</p><p>Obv. (from 1 o'clock: ) +EDVVARD: F:ILI [...]</p><p>Rev. (from 6 o'clock: ) [...] +h' REGIS ANGLIE (Duplessy 1037, variant: obverse stops are colons instead of the the quintessentially 13th-century " ' "s.)</p><p><br /></p><p>...Since this is the best I've got, people are cordially invited to post any and all Anglo-Gallic you've got.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="+VGO.DVCKS, post: 7655444, member: 110504"]What nudged me to start this was revisiting a suggestion by [USER=87080]@TheRed[/USER], in a thread where it obviously (and consensually) didn't belong. To quote his post: "Anglo-Gallic coins have a wide range varieties for some of the issues it makes it real exercise in fly specking. That is especially true for the coins of Edward III. Some of his issues are known by a handful of coins. "I'd love to see your examples, you should definitely post them to the forum. We need some Anglo-Gallic post on here. The FILI REGIS deniers are some of my favorite Anglo Gallic coins, they have such a great lion on the obverse." [URL]https://www.cointalk.com/threads/ancient-medieval-coins-canada-amcc-3.368777/page-2#post-4968867[/URL] Here are the ones I have, apart from a Richard I which was posted elsewhere (with only mild hyperbole) the day before yesterday. (...I don't even know if Elias, for one, counted later issues of Calais as part of the series. --Although Duplessy does include them in his [U]Monnaies Feodales[/U].) [ATTACH=full]1316095[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=full]1316096[/ATTACH] Duchy of Aquitaine. Henry II as Duke in right of Eleanor of Aquitaine, 1154-1189. Obv. +hENRICVS REX. Rev. +AQVI[/]TANI[/]E. Annulets to either side of the initial crosslet and terminal 'E'. (From here, this is Duplessy 1030.) ...Then, with apologies, here's the first and worse of my examples of the future Edward I as Duke. (Finally turned up, unlabelled, in one of my 'junk' files.) [ATTACH=full]1316100[/ATTACH] Edward as Duke, prior to his coronation, 1252-1272 (likely continued --my guess-- prior to his arrival back in England and formal investment in 1274). Obv. Lion (--promise you, theRed was right; it's a cool lion, when you can see it). Obv. (from 1 o'clock: ) +EDVVARD: F:ILI [...] Rev. (from 6 o'clock: ) [...] +h' REGIS ANGLIE (Duplessy 1037, variant: obverse stops are colons instead of the the quintessentially 13th-century " ' "s.) ...Since this is the best I've got, people are cordially invited to post any and all Anglo-Gallic you've got.[/QUOTE]
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