DE | EN | FR LoginSign Up
Copyright © 2020 catalogarchive.org.
Alle Rechte vorbehalten.
Nr. 6625 - (maschinell)
«Previous entry | Next entry »
Details Map Descriptions from literature and trade



SovereignTitleFrom-To

From-ToRarity*MaterialDiameterWeight
1,1037527593819--
Description


(ANGLO-SAXON, Pale Gold Phase. Circa 650-675. AV Thrymsa (12mm, 1.29 g, 9h). Type II.i ('Concordia' or 'Clasped hands'). Radiate bust right / Clasped hands; NIB (B retrograde) above, A below. Sutherland 23-5 (unlisted dies) = A&W 328-30; Belfort 6625 (uncertain Merovingian); Metcalf ; SCBI 63 (BM), 19-20 and p. 93, note 74 (this coin cited); EMC 2008.0030 = Coin Register 2009, 53 (this coin); North 16; SCBC 765. EF, traces of luster, light marks. Extremely rare one of only four known, one of two in private hands. Ex Dix, Noonan, & Web 58 (25 June 2003), lot 384. Found Maidstone, near Kent, May 2003. Many of the early Anglo-Saxon thrymsa types were derived from Roman sources. In his 1948 study of the Anglo-Saxon gold coinage, Sutherland ascribed the prototype for the exceedingly rare 'clasped hands' type to a concordia type antoninianus of the Romano-British usurper Carausius. More recently, though, silver coins of Carausius with this type have come to light (see Triton XVII, lot 787), providing another possible source. Most other Roman-derived thrymsas take bronze and gold issues of the Constantinian or Valentinian dynasty for their models. Anglo-Saxon moneyers likely encountered these earlier coins either through sporadic continued circulation or chance discovery of hoards and isolated specimens.)
References Literature Trade Finds Museums
Classical Numismatic Group, LLC 99, 1206