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St. James's Auctions
Auction 36  19 April 2016
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Lot 77

Estimate: 10 000 GBP
Price realized: 12 000 GBP
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Elizabeth I, sixth issue, 'fine' sovereign of 30 shillings, mm. A (1583-1584/5), crowned figure of queen enthroned facing, holding orb and sceptre, portcullis at feet, rev. shield of arms at centre of full-blown rose, wt. 15.00gms. (S.2529; N.2003; Schneider 778), the portrait somewhat double-struck but all other motifs and the legends sharp and clear, full rims on a broad flan, good very fine, rare. The largest and most intrinsically valuable gold coin of the many issues of this reign, this was the jewel of Renaissance coinage, minted from nearly pure gold (.995 fine) and typically found with bent or wavy flans, often cracked and dented, because of the purity of the metal. While a coin such as this was never or rarely seen by the queen's subjects other than nobility, it was a staple at Court and viewed by those abroad as emblematic of Elizabeth's reign, in sharp contrast to the questionable and much unwanted money of the kingdom as it remained at the end of her father's rule. Almost from the very beginning, the queen sought to restore her money to renown, and as Challis notes (A New History of the Royal Mint, page 248), 'Elizabeth's 'notable convercion of the base monyes to the prestinat state of sterlings' has rightly been regarded from her own day to this as an important achievement, one which, as Camden put it, 'turned to her greater, yea greatest, glory'. (£10000 - 15000)
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