NumisBids
  
Classical Numismatic Group, LLC
Electronic Auction 510  23 Feb 2022
View prices realized

Lot 927

Estimate: 100 USD
Price realized: 350 USD
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
PLANTAGENET. Henry II. 1154-1189. AR Penny (21mm, 1.45 g, 5h). Short Cross type, class 1b2. London mint; Davi, moneyer. Struck circa 1182-circa 1185. Crowned facing bust, holding scepter / + DΛVI • ON • LVND, voided short cross; quatrefoils in angles. Friedenberg p. 9-11; SCBI 56 (Mass), 264; North 963; SCBC 1344. Toned, areas of flat strike. Fine.

From the Dr. Jay M. Galst Collection. Ex Robert Schonwalter Collection (Triton VIII, 11 January 2005), lot 1770a.

Friedenberg, pp. 9-11, discusses the evidence for Jewish moneyers in England in the 12th and 13th centuries. There is no evidence of an organized Jewish community in England before the arrival of the Normans, although merchants may have partaken of trade opportunities since Roman times. The English Jews became a well-established community, allowed to own businesses and property, as well as practicing their traditional occupations as jewelers and money-lenders. Their activities in monetary transactions would have placed them in an excellent position to undertake the role of moneyer for the king. Friedenberg mentions one potential stumbling block, in that the moneyer had to swear a (Christian) oath of fealty to the king, but court records of the period indicate that testimony could be accepted from Jews who swore on the Torah, so this may not have been an insurmountable difficulty. In any case, moneyers named Abel, Daniel, Davi(d), Isaac, Jacob, Samuel, Saul and Solomon are known from the period, all of whom could be Jews, or perhaps merely Christians with Old Testament names. There is no definitive proof one way or the other. The medieval Jewish presence in England ended in 1290, when Edward I extorted a huge loan from the Jewish community, then expelled them from the island.
Question about this auction? Contact Classical Numismatic Group, LLC