Medieval silver farthing of King John by Ricard.T. of London
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About this item
This is a medieval silver farthing of King John struck at the London mint between 1205- 1207 AD. The Moneyer who struck the coin was likely Ricard.T. Class 5bii
Obverse: hЄNRICVS | RЄX "King Henry" Legend around crowned facing portrait, with sceptre in right hand.
Reverse: RICARD.T.ON.LVND "Ricard.T. of London"
This coin started life as a penny, but it was necessitated in trade to chop the coins into smaller fractional denominations as halfpennies and farthings. These coins were legal tender and a halfpenny was simply a penny cut in half, whilst farthings (four things) were divided into four parts.
DENOMINATION: Farthing
CULTURE: Medieval England
MONARCH: John
DATE: 1199 - 1216 AD (this coin was minted between 1205 - 1207 AD)
MATERIAL: Silver
SIZE: 9mm x 9mm
WEIGHT: 0.34 grams
ATTRIBUTION: Spink 1351
PROVENANCE: Formerly in a private collection, in Cambridgeshire.
Additional Information
Avon, United Kingdom