Goldberg Coins and Collectibles



Sale 37


 
 
press UP arrow key to increase the zoom ratio.
press DOWN arrow key to decrease the zoom ratio.
press RIGHT arrow key to increase the zoom window size.
press LEFT arrow key to decrease the zoom window size.

Lot 3682

Great Britain. 5 Guineas, 1687. S.3397; Fr-292. James II, 1685-1688. Laureate bust of King facing left. Reverse: Crowned cruciform shields, sceptres in angles. Edge reads in raised lettering: DECVS ET TVTAMEN ANNO REGNI TERTIO. A very pleasing specimen with no areas of weakness and all lettering and design nicely struck. There is a rich orange/gold tone in the lettering, and in the fields a certain prooflike quality. It is no exaggeration to say that Five Guineas are becoming more difficult to obtain as each month passes. It seems that collectors now really appreciate the true rarity of these large handsome coins in the higher grades. NGC graded AU-55.

** All James II coins are rare and as this was a very short (four years) series the reign is numismatically popular. King James II was a complex but rather unexciting character who lived much of his life in the shadow of his more charismatic brother, King Charles II. When their father was facing defeat by the Parliamentary forces during the English Civil War, James escaped from St James's Palace in 1648 and left the country. He married Anne Hyde, daughter of Edward Hyde (later Duke of Clarendon) at The Hague, Netherlands, in August 1659, and returned to England when the monarchy was restored in 1660. Like his brother, he had a string of mistresses - Jane Middleton, Elizabeth Butler Lady Chesterfield, Goditha Price, Margaret Brook Lady Denham, Arabella Churchill, and Catherine Sedley Countess of Dorchester, among others, and a string of illegitimate children!
James converted to Catholicism in the 1660's, but his brother Charles II, fearful of upsetting public opinion, insisted that he should still take the Anglican connunion and that his surviving (legitimate) children (the future monarchs Mary II and Anne) should continue to be instructed as Protestants.
Things were fine until James's wife Anne died in 1671 and in 1673 married the 15 year old Mary of Modena. In 1685 Charles II died and James became King. In 1688 his new Roman Catholic wife, Mary, bore him a Catholic son, and James asked the Pop to stand as godfather! This was step too far for an English public which was heavily Protestant. At this stage, a group of English magnates - six moneyed lords and a bishop - asked William of Orange, James's son-in-law, to deliver the nation from 'a perpetuation of evil'. William landed in Torbay and James, with his army, advanced to meet him. When James's generals deserted him he fled to Ireland, where he was defeated by William at the Battle of the Boyne in July 1690, and he spent his last years in France. In the meantime, William and Mary assumed the throne as joint monarchs.
Estimated Value $13,000 - 16,000.

 
Realized $14,400



Go to lot:  


Home | Current Sale | Calendar of Events | Bidding | Consign | About Us | Contact | Archives | Log In

US Coins & Currency | World & Ancient Coins | Manuscripts & Collectibles | Bonded CA Auctioneers No. 3S9543300
11400 W. Olympic Blvd, Suite 800, Los Angeles CA 90064 | 310. 551.2646 ph | 310.551.2626 fx | 800.978.2646 toll free

© 2011 Ira & Larry Goldberg Coins & Collectibles, All Rights Reserved
info@goldbergcoins.com