Spink announced their sale of the Academic Collection of English coins assembled by Lord Stewartby, to be held March 22, 2016. It is rare
for such a carefully assembled and curated collection to come to market, and the catalogue will likely become an important reference
work. Here is the press release, published March 4, 2016. -Editor
The Academic Collection of English coins assembled by Lord Stewartby over a long and very active lifetime will be dispersed by Spink in
a series of auctions over the coming months. The first part containing Anglo-Saxon and Norman coins, taking place on the 22nd March 2016,
will give collectors the opportunity to acquire some extremely rare pieces at affordable prices. Many of the coins were also acquired from
some of the great collections of the past so they come with impressive provenances; in his own words, Lord Stewartby said: "The only
sad thing about a collection such as this is that it would be impossible for an interested amateur, as I was, to put it together
today".
An interest in coinage was developed at a young age when, as a small boy, clinging to his mother's hand in war-torn Barnet, he
noticed a copper coin in a jar on the counter of a grocer's shop with two heads on it and recognised it as being from the reign of
William & Mary. And thus began his lifelong interest in, and contribution to, numismatics.
The sale immediately kicks off with a superb gold Thrymsa of Eadbald of Kent, the first gold coin issued in the name of an English king,
extremely fine and extremely rare, one of only seven examples. In 1998, new finds enabled the obverse inscription on the coin to be
confirmed as AVDVARLD REGES, and translated as 'of King Audvarld'. The name 'auduarldus' appears in Bede's Historia
Ecclesiastica completed in 731 in which he wrote about king Eadbald of Kent.
Eadbald succeeded Aethelberht as king of Kent in 616. According to Bede, after his accession Eadbald fell afoul of the young Christian
Church, ejecting its Bishops and incurring the wrath of the Church for '. . . he took his father's (second) wife as his own.'
Whatever Eadbald did, this situation did not last for he repented and was duly baptized, rejecting his wife and thereafter favouring the
Church within his kingdom. These events reflect the conflict and confusion amongst the Anglo-Saxon elite at this time as Christianity
sought to assert itself over the Pagan religion. This struggle is best known from the mix of Pagan and Christian artefacts in the Sutton
Hoo ship burial, which is contemporaneous to Eadbald and this coin. As to the date of these named Thrymsas or Shillings of Eadbald, the
presence of Christian iconography dates them to after his conversion and a date to between 620 and 635 is thought appropriate.
Lot 1, estimated: £12,000-15,000
From such a hectic relationship with Christianity, there are also truly stunning coins that show the later harmony and acceptance in the
country. Lot 72 is an excellent example of such as a Penny commissioned by the Archbishops of Canterbury, Jaenberht (766-92), with King
Offa as overlord, a good example of this rare issue and extremely rare.
Lot 72, estimated: £3,000 - 4,000
From the Norman section is a fantastic William I Penny, lot 321, a Two sceptres type bearing a very stern-faced resemblance of the
conquering King. An extremely rare coin.
Lot 321, estimated: £2,500 - 3,000
For collectors of early English hammered coins, here truly is a sale that has 'something for everyone'.
To read the complete article, see:
Anglo-Saxon
and Norman Coins to Battle it out in the Spink Auction Room
(/www.spink.com/press-releases/anglo-saxon-and-norman-coins-to-battle-it-out-in-the-spink-auction-room.aspx/?id=coins&year=2016)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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