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Davissons Ltd.
Auction 37  21 Feb 2018
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Lot 270

Estimate: 1500 USD
Price realized: 1200 USD
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IRELAND. Charles I. 1625-1649. AR siege sixpence. 2.72 gm. 22 mm. Ormonde Siege coinage. (1643). C R crowned. Crown: well formed with the outer arches round and graceful; the C and R are large. C: top ends in a squared off serif and the lower tail of the C ends in a point. R: has moderately heavy lines and a short leg / VI, large D above (recut die). VI: neatly formed with medium thickness lines, serifs touching via a very light serif line; D: larger and well centered above the VI. S. 6547. D&F 301. Near Extremely Fine; well centered, generally well struck, attractive old toning; choice coin and an exceptional example of a sixpence of this series. (If you want the best possible sixpence for this series, you will be hard pressed to improve on this coin.).

The Ormonde Siege Coinage of 1643-1644 Royalist issue in Ireland during The Great Rebellion Why so many varieties and next to no efforts to classify the types? I have been puzzling over this ever since we began working with Bruce Ormond's collection. You can see the result-awkward efforts to describe die varieties for the pieces listed in this sale. Compared to most other British coin series, little has been written about this extensive Irish issue. • James Simon in his Essay (Dublin, 1810) devotes a bit over a half page to the issue commenting that "It appears...that his majesty still designed to restore the royal mint in Dublin, but that it was prevented by the troubles in England." After listing the denominations he quotes a 1743 publication that "About one hundred and twenty thousand pounds worth of plate was coined at this time." The amount of coinage minted and the great variety of dies suggest that the dies had short lives. • Lindsay in his 1839 Coinage of Ireland devotes one brief paragraph to the series. • The Spink Standard Catalog, Coins of Scotland, Ireland and the Islands... gives the series two thirds of one page, a single line introduction, a list of one each of the denominations and, at the bottom in small print, a single line note: "For varieties, see Aquilla Smith, 'On the Ormonde Money.' PRSAI (1854) This series shows great variation in the size and nature of each of the main elements of the coin. I have gone through a substantial number of images of Ormonde pieces and can see why no one (apparently) has ever done any kind of die study. If you look up the Aquilla Smith article you will see a single page of drawn images related to the series but no effort to create a listing of variations. I have spent hours reviewing images of Ormonde pieces that have been offered over the past few years. At best, the parameters I have come up with are general: are the design elements thick or thin, small or tall, within or breaching the inner circle, punctuated or not. Is the placement of the elements in relation to one another centered (or "plumb"). There are broken dies, and many uneven strikes. The variation is fascinating in itself and like much else in the Irish series, it speaks volumes about life and the Irish economy at the time. The collection offered here was put together by a descendant of the original Ormonde. In addition to representing all the denominations (including the extremely rare twopence), the group gives you an introduction to the variety of dies and strikings in the series. Ormonde weight standards (just under Tower standards): Crown: (456 grn) 29.55 gm Half crown: (228 grn) 14.8 gm Shilling: (91.2 grn) 5.9 gm Sixpence: (45.6 gr) 2.95 gm Groat: (30.4 grn) 1.97 gm Threepence: (22.2 grn)1.43 gm Twopence: (15.2 grn) .98 gm

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