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v24_1075 - PHILIP II AUGUSTUS AND ROGER II DE ROSOI Denier c. 1180-1201 Laon

PHILIP II AUGUSTUS AND ROGER II DE ROSOI Denier c. 1180-1201 Laon F
MONNAIES 24 (2005)
Starting price : 80.00 €
Estimate : 150.00 €
Realised price : 80.00 €
Number of bids : 1
Maximum bid : 110.00 €
Type : Denier
Date: c. 1180-1201 
Mint name / Town : Laon
Metal : silver
Diameter : 18 mm
Orientation dies : 2 h.
Weight : 0,94 g.
Rarity : R1
Coments on the condition:
Ce denier est frappé sur un flan régulier et présente une faiblesse de frappe au niveau des types centraux
Catalogue references :
Predigree :
Exemplaire provenant de MONNAIES XVIII, n° 981

Obverse


Obverse legend : + PHILIPVS RE.
Obverse description : Buste couronné du roi de face.
Obverse translation : (Philippe, roi).

Reverse


Reverse legend : + ROGERVS EPE.
Reverse description : Buste mitré de l'évêque de face.
Reverse translation : (Roger, évêque).

Historical background


PHILIP II AUGUSTUS AND ROGER II DE ROSOI

(09/11/1180-07/14/1223)

Philippe was born in 1165. He is the only son of Louis VII the Younger and his third wife Adèle de Champagne. King at 15, he first had to face his turbulent neighbours, the Counts of Champagne, Flanders and the Duke of Burgundy, a conflict which ended with the Treaty of Boves in 1185. He acquired Vermandois and Amiens, married in 1180 Isabelle de Hainaut (+1190), niece of the count of Flanders, Philippe d'Alsace, and received the county of Artois (Arras) as a dowry from his wife, from whom he had the future Louis VIII, born in 1187. That year , he supported Richard the Lionheart against Henry II (1187-1189). Party in Crusade with Richard and Frederic Ier Barberousse, he gives up after the capture of Richard in Austria. Back in France, he invaded Normandy, but was defeated. After the death of Richard, he fights his brother Jean-sans-Terre (1199-1216). After the assassination of Arthur of Brittany, he confiscated all of Jean's French fiefdoms in 1204 (Normandy, Touraine, Anjou and Poitou) and crushed a coalition at Bouvines in 1214. Entangled in marital disputes, he was excommunicated in 1199 and does not take part in the crusade against the Albigenses. He died in 1223.

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