Victorian Three-Halfpence 1839.
The smallest Silver Coin (baring the Maundy one penny) the UK has produced and it was for the Colonial use only. Minted only under Victoria and William IV they are Rare little things especially in this condition.
William IV Three-Halfpence 1834.
The smallest Silver Coin (baring the Maundy one penny) the UK has produced and it was for the Colonial use only. Minted only under William IV and Victoria they are Rare little things especially in this condition.
Very Rare Edward VI Halfpenny in the name of Henry VIII 1547-51.
Took a little bit of research but got there in the end, Part of the Rarer crossover coinage from Henry VIII to Edward VI minted in London in 1547-51. What makes this so rare is you can see it bears the Tudor rose of Edwards coinage and the old long cross reverse of his father very few of these ever see the open market.
‘Iron Bridge at Coalbrook Dale’ Halfpenny 1792.
Normally I don’t go in for token coins but this is the best I’ve seen in a long year. Lovely UNC condition.
Mysore (India) 20 Cash 1833.
Nice little coin from India’s history, bearing the legend ‘Between the Sun and Moon’. Good for Indian and Colonial coin collectors.
Rare Sierra Leone Company one Cent 1791.
Another lovely Colonial coin in good condition to say its age, Sierra Leone was colonised by the British in 1787 and has stayed within the Commonwealth from that day.
Rare Calcutta Half Anna 1835.
A very rare colonial Half Anna minted in Calcutta as a stop gap coin just before they issued the more recognisable East India Company Half Anna Coin in the same Year.
Emperor Antoninus Pius 138-161 AD who built the second defensive wall above Hadrians wall, this silver denarius was minted in York. The reverse of the coin depicts the goddess Providentia pointing at the globe at her feet and holding a sceptre of power. In extra fine condition.
Emperor Nero 54-68 AD is another must have for Roman coin collectors; this coin is rarer than the normal silver denarius as it is the one with the three empirical standards on the reverse minted in Rome and somehow making its way to the British Isles. Extra fine condition.
Julius Caesar 54-44 BC. All his coins are highly sort after, this one in particular. It was minted after the conquest of Gaul the reverse depicts his triumphant standard flanked by two captive Gallic warriors. Its one of the rare ones and its in very fine condition.