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Noonans sell Sword and Sceptre piece and other finds

Noonans sell Sword and Sceptre piece and other finds

Noonans auction on 1 February 2023 included over 50 detecting finds with perhaps the best amongst them a Sword and Sceptre piece of James VI of Scotland. A couple of these failed to sell but generally prices were in line with expectations.

To view any of my selected lots in the auction catalogue click on the lot number. The full catalogue can be found here.

There is a buyer’s premium of 24% (plus VAT) on the hammer price.

Featured lot

Photo: © Noonans

Sword and Sceptre piece of James VI of Scotland

Mint: Edinburgh
Estimate: £1,500 – £2,000
Hammer: £2400

Found in North Lincolnshire in September 2022. The obverse shows a crowned sword and sceptre, flanked by thistles; hence the name of the coin. The reverse legend reads SALVS · POPVLI · SVPREMA · LEX – The safety of the People is the supreme law.

The coin was worth 6 Scottish pounds (about 10 English shillings). It is from the eighth coinage of James VI of Scotland which was his last before his accession to the English throne in 1603.

Sword and sceptre

The use of the sword and sceptre as state symbols in Scotland date from the late fifteenth century under James IV of Scotland. In 1494 Pope Alexander VI gave him a silver-gilt sceptre and thirteen years later Pope Julius II gave him a sword.

Crown, sword and sceptre as part of a ceremony to mark the coronation of Elizabeth II

They were first used as coronation regalia at the coronation of Mary, Queen of Scots in 1543 and then James VI in 1567. Lost some time during the Civil War they were found again in 1818. They are used on state occasions such as the visit of the newly crowned Elizabeth II.

Other detecting finds

Photo: © Noonans

Sceatta, Continental series D

Found near the border of Norfolk and Suffolk in 2022. A Continental series D, type 4c sceatta.
Estimate: £360 – £400
Photo: © Noonans

Penny of Offa

Found in Cobham, Surrey in 2020 and recorded at the EMC as 2020.0337. The moneyer is Wihtræd from an uncertain East Anglian mint. It has been straightened after being found bent.
Estimate: £900 – £1,200
Hammer: £1000
Photo: © Noonans

Penny of Coenwulf

Found near Buriton, Hampshire in 2018 and recorded at the EMC as 2019.0207. The reverse has LVD AM AN in the angles of the tribach device giving an unusual spelling of the moneyer (usually LVDOMAN). London mint.
Estimate: £600 – £800
Hammer: £650
Photo: © Noonans

Penny of Henry I

Found in 2018 near Stowmarket, Suffolk and recorded at the EMC as 2022.0288. The reverse reads GODRICUS ON PIR giving the moneyer as Godric and the mint as Worcester. This moneyer is not recorded for this type.
Estimate: £800 – £1,000
Photo: © Noonans

Half Sovereign of Henry VIII

A half sovereign of Henry VIII’s posthumous coinage. Double struck on both sides. Found in Dorset.
Estimate: £1,200 – £1,500
Hammer: £1700
Photo: © Noonans

Farthing of David II

Found in Norfolk in 2022. A first coinage farthing of David II of Scotland.
Estimate: £500 – £700
Hammer: £650
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