Summary
Silver coin; Denomination: Crown
Edinburgh Mint (mint mark E below the Queen's bust)
Queen Anne (1702-1714)
In 1707 the Act of the Union was passed joining England and Scotland into a single realm, this coin was struck after that so the arms of England and Scotland are halved within a shield and repeated twice. Before the Union each set of arms occupied its own shield.
The legend on the coin reads as a single title from front to back, it translates as 'Anne by the Grace of God Queen of Great Britain, France and Ireland".
Obverse Description
Draped bust of Anne, left; below, the mint mark, E; around, ANNA DEI GRATIA
Reverse Description
Crowned shields - with arms of England and Scotland emblazoned per pale at top and bottom and Ireland and France forming a cross shape with the badge of the Star of the Garter at the centre; between the shields are two roses and two plumes; around, MAG BRI . FR ET . HIB REG 1707, the date being divided by the crown above the English and Scottish arms.
Edge Description
In raised lettering, DECVS ET TVTAMEN ANNO REGNI SEXTO
More Information
-
Collecting Areas
-
Acquisition Information
Transfer from Melbourne Branch of Royal Mint, 1978
-
Date Issued
1707 AD
-
Issued By
-
Mint
-
Denomination
-
Material
Silver
-
Axis
06
-
Classification
-
Category
-
Discipline
-
Type of item
-
Overall Dimensions
38 mm (Outside Diameter), 30.004 g (Weight)
-
Shape
Round
-
References
[Book] Skingley, Philip. 2007. Coins of England and the United Kingdom., Spink 3600 Pages