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fme_666558 - DUCHY OF LORRAINE - CHARLES IV Médaille, Charles de Lorraine, Prince de Vaudémont

DUCHY OF LORRAINE - CHARLES IV Médaille, Charles de Lorraine, Prince de Vaudémont AU
Not available.
Item sold on our e-shop (2021)
Price : 350.00 €
Type : Médaille, Charles de Lorraine, Prince de Vaudémont
Date: (1621)
Metal : bronze
Diameter : 50,5 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Engraver Gaspar Morone Mola
Weight : 51,81 g.
Edge : lisse
Puncheon : sans poinçon
Coments on the condition:
Exemplaire ayant été nettoyé et présentant un aspect irisé sur certains reliefs. Quelques frottements sont visibles dans les champs ainsi que quelques fines rayures
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : CAROLVS A LOTH PRINCEPS. A. VAVDEMONT..
Obverse description : Buste cuirassé et drapé à droite, signé : GASP. 1621.

Reverse


Reverse legend : VIRTVS - EST PATRVM.
Reverse description : Aigle aux ailes éployées, posée au sol et regardant vers le soleil.

Commentary


Dimensions : 50,5*41,5 mm
Bien que cet exemplaire ne présente pas de poinçon, il semble s’agir d’une frappe moderne.

Historical background


DUCHY OF LORRAINE - CHARLES IV

(1625-1675)

Charles de Vaudémont was the cousin and fiancé of Nicole de Lorraine, daughter of Henry I of Lorraine who died in 1624 without a male heir. In 1624, Nicole inherited the Duchy of Lorraine according to her father's will. In 1625, it was dispossessed of it in favor of Charles IV, whose personal reign began in 1625. Charles IV entered the league formed against France, gave asylum in 1630 to Gaston d'Orléans, the brother of the King of France, who was in disgrace and, on January 13, 1630, even secretly married his sister Marguerite to Gaston d'Orléans. His positions against the troops of the King of Sweden, Gustave II Adolphe, an ally of France in the conflict of the Thirty Years' War, gave Louis XIII the opportunity to conquer the Duchy of Lorraine. The conquest was short and Charles IV abdicated in Mirecourt on January 19, 1634 in favor of his brother Nicolas François. He retired to Besançon and never stopped fighting the French troops; he recovered his duchy in 1661, after their departure.

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