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E-auction 34-12379 - fre_310528 - ENGLAND - JOHN LACKLAND - COINAGE IN THE NAME OF HENRY II Denier ou Penny, short cross coinage n.d. Northampton

ENGLAND - JOHN LACKLAND - COINAGE IN THE NAME OF HENRY II Denier ou Penny, short cross coinage n.d. Northampton VF
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NO BUYER'S FEE.
Estimate : 180 €
Price : 68 €
Maximum bid : 71 €
End of the sale : 09 December 2013 16:56:30
bidders : 8 bidders
Type : Denier ou Penny, short cross coinage
Date: c.1200-1210
Date: n.d.
Mint name / Town : Northampton
Metal : silver
Diameter : 19 mm
Orientation dies : 5 h.
Weight : 1,33 g.
Rarity : R1
Coments on the condition:
Flan large et poids lourd. Patine foncée
Predigree :
Exemplaire provenant de Monnaies III, n°528

Obverse


Obverse legend : + HENRICVS - REX.
Obverse description : Buste cournonné de face.

Reverse


Reverse legend : + ADA ON NORH.
Reverse description : Crois alésée et bouletée, cantonnée de quatre croisettes bouletées.

Historical background


ENGLAND - JOHN LACKLAND - COINAGE IN THE NAME OF HENRY II

(1199-1216)

John was born in Oxford on December 24, 1167 from the union of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine, of whom he was the fifth child. He was nicknamed "Landless" because his father had divided his domains among his elders. On the death of his brother Richard Coeur de Lion, which occurred in April 1199, he acceded to the throne of England at the expense of his nephew Duke Arthur of Brittany, son of Geoffroy, third child of Henry II. He had to fight against Philippe Auguste who confiscated his French domains (Anjou, Touraine, Normandy, Poitou...). He also clashed with the English barons who occupied London in May 1215 and, together with the bourgeois and the bishops, forced him to sign the Magna Carta, the great charter of English freedoms. In 1216, Jean not having kept his promises, the barons revolted again and proposed the crown of England to Louis, son of the king of France Philippe Auguste. The Plantagenet dynasty was saved by the death of King John in October 1216 at Newark Castle (Nottinghamshire), his son Henry III succeeding him.

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