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BUY BOTH FINDS IDENTIFIED AND FINDS IDENTIFIED II FOR £55 - SAVE £9!
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NEW - PUBLISHED FEBRUARY 2023
The second volume of this brand new comprehensive guide covers every type of English gold coin from 1816 onwards and includes many new varieties, along with rarity values, arranged by monarch. Accompanying Bull reference numbers are again cross-referenced to the Standard Catalogue of British Coins.
Hardback, 216x138mm, 480 pages with colour illustrations throughout
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A Handbook of Late Roman Bronze Coin Types, 324 – 395, by Shawn M Caza
With more than 260 illustrations and catalogue entries for each bronze reverse type struck from AD 324 to 395, this catalogue gives detailed information about the late Roman bronze coinage systems, with each entry including details on dates, mints, personalities, weight standard, important variations and the history and meaning of the legend and design.
£65.00
Hardback, with colour illustrations throughout, 352 pages, 216 x 138mm
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BUY ALL 3 FOR £60, SAVING £5
The Voided Long-Cross Coinage 1247-1279 by Christopher R. Wren
Paperback, 88 pages
The English Long-Cross Pennies 1279-1489 by Christopher R. Wren
Paperback, 196 pages
The Short-Cross Coinage 1180-1247 by Christopher R. Wren
Paperback, 96 pages
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Charles I Oxford Mint Half-Crowns
(1642-1646) | Maurice Bull
NEW - Published September 2023
£100.00
This publication is the culmination of a lifetime’s work collecting, studying, and recording full details of the Half-crown denomination struck at the Oxford Mint, 1642-1646, the largest of all the King’s Provincial Mints during the Civil War of England (1642-1649).
HARDBACK A4 384 PAGES
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Roman Imperial Coinage Volume V.4: The Gallic Empire by Jerome Mairat
Regular price£150.00
276 x 219mm, 404 pages
The Roman Imperial Coinage (abbreviated RIC) is a typological catalogue of Roman Imperial coins from the Battle of Actium in 31 BC to Late Antiquity in 491 AD. It aims to offer a complete and chronological reconstruction of the whole coinage produced by each
of the Roman emperors. The series was started in 1923, and has become the standard work for numismatic reference. It was previously comprised of 10 volumes in 13 parts, some of which are currently being revised and will be divided differently.
This brand new volume, published to celebrate the centenary of the series, covers the Gallic Empire from AD 260-274.
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