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Replies: 1,992 / Views: 285,576 |
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Valued Member
Sweden
347 Posts |
Alright, I reckon it's time for those 8 Reales coins now..
Edited by Ngdawa 05/31/2011 3:33 pm
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Pillar of the Community
Netherlands
561 Posts |
I was waiting for something different.. Have enough VOC duit left..
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10045 Posts |
My next coin is 1702; I'm patient. 
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
1324 Posts |
Wurzburg, 1748 4 Kreuzer or Batzen. I have to admit not one of my best coins :) 
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
1324 Posts |
No 1747? Here is a Grano, from Malta 
Edited by andyg 06/02/2011 6:50 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3345 Posts |
I like how the minters put the date around the star like that-any more coins where that has been done?
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Moderator
 Australia
16868 Posts |
I'm getting more and more gaps in my date series. My next dates are 1745, 1741, 1735, 1734, 1733, 1731... But I do have a 1746. It's another Dutch duit, and not in the best of condition... VOC (Netherlands Indies), Utrecht. Only just bought it at the coin show two weeks ago.  Quote: I like how the minters put the date around the star like that-any more coins where that has been done? The coin I posted for 1752 from Liege on the previous page employs a similar tactic, with the date numerals in the four quadrants of the cross formed by the coats of arms. It seems to have been the fashionable thing to do in the late 1600s-mid 1700s; there are some English crowns of William and Mary from the late 1600s that employ the same effect; see here's a Christies sale of an example of the 1692 "2 over inverted 2" type. It must have been confusing for the poor die-cutter in a date like "1692" to figure out which way up the "2" should be going!
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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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
1324 Posts |
@Sap - Haven't yet run out of dates by my choices are getting somewhat limited! Here is a 1745... UK, ½ Crown 1745 LIMA The Lima denotes this coin was made from silver captured by the English from Spain in the Americas. 
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Valued Member
United States
343 Posts |
1744 Action off Toulon Apparently this battle generated a lot of controversy regarding the actions of the commanders. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to locate the pamphlet that reportedly accompanied this piece which explained the significance of A, B, C, etc. 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1890 Posts |
Ironically I have the exact same 1745 as andyg except in shilling format. This coin is sort of rough, possibly sea salvaged or metal detected. (I missed that huge 1745 aperture while I was mowing the lawn.) 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1890 Posts |
Here's the 1744 I bought on ebay awhile back, in a moment of pre-CCF wildly uneducated enthusiasm. It has been exposed to the critics in another thread. Feel free to consider it a 'coin-like object' because that's all it seems to be.   
Edited by mysilveryears 06/03/2011 4:45 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
1324 Posts |
@Mysilveryears
>>Feel free to consider it a 'coin-like object' because that's all it seems to be
Would you like to tell the uneducated (i.e. me) what's wrong with it? I fear I would have fallen victim too!
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
Quote: Unfortunately, I haven't been able to locate the pamphlet that reportedly accompanied this piece which explained the significance of A, B, C, etc. They were playing hangman.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1143 Posts |
Found this on Stacks site...
GREAT BRITAIN. 1744 Action off Toulon Medal. Pinchbeck Brass, 37.8mm. MI CLXIII:4.
Obv. British officer (suggested to be Admiral Mathews or Lescock) hanging from gallows, victorious British fleet in background amid sunken French and Spanish ships and swimming sailors. Rev. British force lands before fortified port (Dunkirk or Brest) with British lion attacking French coq. This somewhat mysterious medal recalls the Admiral Vernon series, suggesting a political cartoon or satire in medallic form. Mathews and Lescock defeated their enemies but then squabbled with each other rather than pursuing the fleeing foe, losing the chance for total annihilation and facing trial with Mathews expelled from the service; neither officer was actually hanged
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1890 Posts |
Quote: Would you like to tell the uneducated (i.e. me) what's wrong with it? I fear I would have fallen victim too! andyg et.al.: https://goccf.com/t/82694
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Replies: 1,992 / Views: 285,576 |