NumisBids
  
Sovereign Rarities Ltd
Auction 7  21 Sep 2022
View prices realized

Lot 186

Starting price: 24 000 GBP
Price realized: 50 000 GBP
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
PF63+ UCAM | Victoria (1837-1901), silver proof Gothic Crown, 1853, engraved by William Wyon, crowned gothic style bust left, small ww incuse on truncation, trefoil and arc border, legend in lower case Gothic lettering both sides, victoria dei gratia britanniar. reg: f: d., rev. inverted die axis, crowned cruciform shields, emblems in angles, garter star at centre, w incuse on inner border either dies of top crown, date in roman numerals in lower right of legend which commences in upper left quarter, tueatur unita deus anno dom mdcccliii, edge inscribed in raised letters and dated "decus. et. tutamen. anno. regni. decimo septimo." (Bull 2583 R3; L&S 69; ESC 293; S.3884). Amongst the finest examples known, some trivial dark spots to obverse, otherwise highly appealing with deep reflective fields and frosted devices, lightly toned, graded by NGC as PF63+ ULTRA CAMEO, the only 1853 Crown to have received a DCAM or UCAM accolade.

NGC Certification 6318182-001.

The Latin legends translates on obverse as "Victoria by the Grace of God, Queen of the Briton's, Defender of the Faith," and on the reverse as "May God guard these united, in the year of our Lord 1853." The legend on the edge translates as "An ornament and a safeguard in the seventeenth year of her reign."

Produced six years after the much more common 1847 dated Gothic Crown of which 8,000 were struck, the 1853 Gothic Crown was struck only in a very limited number specifically for the proof set dated that year. The quantity is unknown, but it seems proof sets of coins sold slowly in those days and were only available to order through the official agents of that time Hunt and Roskell as the public were not permitted to deal directly with the Mint. The 1853 sets were not struck for any specific occasion but perhaps could be more viewed as the vanity project of the new Master of the Mint as of 1851, the astronomer Sir J. F. W. Herschel. Upon arrival he totally reorganised the Mint clean sweeping away the multiple departments in favour of a centralised office modus operandi with the Master in charge. By 1851-52 period all the older stock of 1839 proof sets had at last been sold, and so the new Master insisted that new sets of all the denominations in proof quality be produced for sale to the public through the official agents on demand, and it seems sets were then sold on a sporadic basis for years afterward. The Gothic Crown was the key piece of the silver and the largest physical coin to feature in the set dated 1853. It is arguably one of the finest designs in the entire milled series and along with the 1839 Una and the Lion gold Five Pounds is one of the most coveted designs by Royal Academy Member William Wyon.

In total, 1,230 Gothic Crowns of all dates and varieties have been graded by NGC and PCGS combined. Of this number, just 41 are dated 1853, less than one percent of the total. What is perhaps rarer still, however, is that this offering has received an 'Ultra Cameo' designation from NGC. Just 15 Gothic Crowns across NGC and PCGS combined have received a Deep/Ultra Cameo designation, making this the most elusive designation for the type. When taken together, only one 1853 Gothic Crown has received an Ultra Cameo or Deep Cameo accolade – the present specimen.


Estimate: £30,000-50,000
Question about this auction? Contact Sovereign Rarities Ltd