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Replies: 16 / Views: 2,968 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7962 Posts |
I agree this is some kind of token. The rose we can see at the beginning/end of the legend in the first photo makes me think of Dordrecht where there was a very active token manufacture in the 16th-17th centuries. But the script looks older, more like the Nuremburg tokens, and the rendering of the coat of arms reverse seems a bit crude. 
Edited by tdziemia 04/13/2022 08:18 am
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7962 Posts |
Found! As it turns out, @numisrob and I were both correct. It is a Dutch imitation of a Nuremburg "Venuspfennig" token, Cataloged as Dugniolle 509a: http://dugniolle.com/dugniolle0501-0600.htmlThe placement in the catalog suggests it was struck in the 1490s.
Edited by tdziemia 04/13/2022 08:31 am
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Moderator
 United States
189603 Posts |
 to the Community!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
896 Posts |
A remarkable find - congratulations!
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New Member
 United Kingdom
4 Posts |
Hi all, thank you for identifying this coin / token. The token has a dot in the middle, with six dots around it under the feet. So is this a new variant of the token? Also, what would such a token be used for? Also, what material is it likely to be made of? (Thanks for your replies today). ps. its diameter is about 2.8 cm
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7962 Posts |
This is a stylized flower (possibly a rose), the mintmark used by Dordrecht in those days. The image in the Dugniolle catalog is a bit dark in this part of the token, but I think the mark is there. There are some other minor differences, which I think are pretty typical.
The composition is often something like bronze or brass.
I'll need for someone else to comment on the use.
Edited by tdziemia 04/13/2022 4:06 pm
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New Member
 United Kingdom
4 Posts |
Thank you all for your responses. Interestingly it seems to be a mixture of 509a and 509b. We wondered what is the best way to clean the token without damaging it? Also how common are these in the UK and do they have any value?
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7962 Posts |
I agree it doesn't perfectly match either 509a or 509b. The poorly executed shield design on the reverse caught my attention and matches 509a. But the objects at Venus' feet do not match that type. Probably many dies were used to make these, with slight differences.
I will let others comment on cleaning. Though the coin suffers a bit from its having been in the soil, aggressive cleaning can make it ugly to a collector/buyer, and nearly worthless. If it were mine, I would leave it more or less as it is. For an object this old, it is in quite good condition.
Edited by tdziemia 04/14/2022 08:19 am
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Moderator
 Australia
16859 Posts |
Quote: Also, what would such a token be used for? Jetons of this type were primarily used as counters on "counting boards". Counting boards worked kind of like an abacus, except they were flat on a table. Counting boards were used (like an abacus) for doing mathematical calculations, in an age when (a) everybody still had to do maths using Roman numerals, since our modern "Arabic" numerals (eg. 0, 1, 2, etc) hadn't yet been introduced to Europeans, (b) when the monetary system was a combination of archaic non-decimal units (in England, that would be pounds, shillings and pence) and (c) when the coins often did not bear easy relationship with that monetary system (eg. groats, halfcrowns and the weirdly odd denominations often assigned to the gold coins). Jetons of different designs would be used by the accountant manning the board to represent different types of coins. Trivia: As a visual aid for sorting different piles of tokens, counting-boards were often given a chequered surface, very much like a chessboard (you could have used a typical counting-board to play chess on, when it wasn't in use for its official purpose). Which is why the head of the Treasury of the British government is still, to this day, given the title "Chancellor of the Exchequer".
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Valued Member
United States
425 Posts |
tdziemia great find. Right on the money. This is why we all come to this great forum. To learn and receive.
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New Member
United States
48 Posts |
I would be excited to dig something like that out of the yard!!
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Valued Member
United States
425 Posts |
My luck in my yard I would find Jimmy Hoffa.
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
1616 Posts |
Not bad for 5 or so centuries in the ground. Copper pennies in Qld look like that after 50 years in the ground. Did you metal detect it or just spotted it with your peepers?
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Valued Member
United States
425 Posts |
NathanH I'm going to the upper peninsula in Michigan for about 4 days in June. I'm taking my metal detector with me and I hope to find something because the area I am going was were the fur traders stayed way back in the days.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7962 Posts |
Even now the UP is one of the least densely populated parts of the United States. I hope you don't set your expectations (for coins) very high.
On the other hand, if you are looking for solitude, nature (and freezing nights) you have a lot to look forward to
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