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Stack's Bowers & Ponterio
August 2019 ANA - Online Sess.  19-21 Aug 2019
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Lot 23236

Starting price: 360 USD
Price realized: 440 USD
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MEXICO. Bronze Proclamation Medal, 1814. Ferdinand VII. MINT STATE.
51 mm; 50.75 gms. Grove-F-23c. The cabildo eclesiástico (ecclesiastical council) at Mexico City. By Guerrero. Obverse: Ferdinand, holding baton, seated left on throne within a draped enclosure; to lower right, figure of Discord (as a gorgon) prostrate right, holding serpent with both hands; Reverse: Legend in six lines. Edge: Plain. Pleasing red-brown surfaces, with underlying luster and hints of cobalt throughout; some scattered, unobtrusive light marks are noted for completeness. Compare to a similar specimen, which realized a hammer of $1,300 in CNG (5/2014).

Ferdinand ascended to the Spanish throne, as well as that of her colonies, following the abdication of his father, Charles IV, in March 1808. Shortly thereafter, Ferdinand himself abdicated and looked to Napoleon I for aid. The latter held the former "under guard" for over five years at the Chateau de Valençay, a property owned by Napoleon's former foreign minister Talleyrand. During this time, Napoleon installed his brother, Joseph, as king-a move which was never accepted by the Spanish people nor her colonies. In Mexico, for example, coins continued to be struck in the name of Ferdinand, still recognized as the true Spanish king. Ferdinand was eventually allowed to return to the Spanish throne late in 1813, as Napoleon faced bigger issues closer to home. This particular medal was issued just after Ferdinand's return, showing him casting aside an allegorical representation of Discord-emblematic of the chaos ushered in by the Napoleonic Wars.

Estimate: $600.00- $800.00

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