Summary

Silver coin; Denomination: Shilling
Tower Mint, London
King James I (1603-1625)

A shilling is a 12 pence coin

Obverse Description

Within an inner beaded circle, a crowned bust of the King facing right; behind, the Roman numeral XII; around, (mm lis) IACOBVS D G MAG BRIT FRA ET HIB REX

Reverse Description

Within a beaded circle a square topped shield quartered with the combined arms of England and France (1 & 4), Scotland (2) and Ireland (3); around, (mm. lis) QVE DEVS CONIVNXIT NEMO SEPARET (translation, What God has joined let no man put asunder).

Edge Description

Plain

More Information

  • Collecting Areas

    Numismatics & Philately

  • Acquisition Information

    Transfer from National Gallery of Victoria (NGV), Dr William Howat, 15 Mar 1976

  • Date Issued

    1604-1605 AD

  • Issued By

    King James I, England, Great Britain

  • Mint

    Royal Mint, London
    The Royal Mint was in the Tower of London at the time this coin was struck and is usually referred to as the Tower Mint

  • Previous Collection

  • Denomination

    1 Shilling

  • Series

    England

  • Material

    Silver

  • Axis

    06

  • Classification

    Coins, Great britain, Working strikes

  • Category

    History & Technology

  • Discipline

    Numismatics

  • Type of item

    Object

  • Overall Dimensions

    32 mm (Outside Diameter), 5.718 g (Weight)

  • Shape

    Round

  • References

    [Book] North, J. J. 1963. English Hammered Coinage., North 2099 Pages
    [Book] Skingley, Philip. 2007. Coins of England and the United Kingdom., Spink 2654 Pages