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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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Byzantine Coins and their Values. 2nd edition by Sear, D.R.
This is an invaluable guide to the whole of the Byzantine series. The Byzantine Empire lasted for almost a thousand years after the fall of the Roman Empire in the West (491-1453). When this catalogue was first published in 1974 it was hailed as containing more information in a concise form than any other single volume on the Byzantine series.
This edition incorporates the research of the intervening years, new attributions and new coins that have been recognised. Over 2,500 coins in gold, silver and bronze are listed, valued and illustrated with more than 600 photographs giving a virtual type catalogue of the Byzantine series.
Hardcover, £50, A5, 526 pages
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| | | SCEATTA LIST - TONY ABRAMSON
3rd EDITION 2021 **NEW**
Sceattas, or Sceats as they are often called, are regularly found by detectorists but are not so easy to identify. This book, with its hundreds of photographs and detailed descriptions, allows the reader not only to identify a coin with ease, but also gives a precise valuation in two conditions – a must have book for every detectorist and coin collector.
This third edition of Sceatta List takes the number of varieties listed and illustrated to beyond seven hundred. It builds on the work of pioneers in the field - Rigold, Metcalf, Blackburn and Gannon.
The volume is essentially for – and essential to – collectors, curators, cataloguers, detectorists and dealers, among others, and includes guidance on scarcity and values.
Hardback, 424 pages £50
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The English Long-Cross Pennies 1279-1489 by Christopher R. Wren
Paperback, 196 pages
This volume covers Edward I to Henry VII and is part of Christopher Wren’s invaluable trio of guides to Medieval pennies which were first published in the 1990s and are intended as an introduction to assist new collectors and detectorists alike in classifying the coins.
These books give a brief historical context of the short cross coinage and the development of the classification system in used today. Information from the original written records has been invaluable in establishing a chronology, and in placing coins of the different types in sequence.
These Royal Numismatic Society Lhotka Prize winning titles are packed full of practical information on this extensive English medieval penny series. They includes tables and many drawings, together with a detailed bibliography for further reading, and notes on such subjects as legend errors, continental imitations and the related issues from Scotland and Ireland.
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The Voided Long-Cross Coinage 1247-1279 by Christopher R. Wren
Paperback, 88 pages
This volume covers coinage of Henry III & Edward I and is part of Christopher Wren’s invaluable trio of guides to Medieval pennies were first published in the 1990s and are intended as an introduction to assist new collectors and detectorists alike in classifying the coins.
These books give a brief historical context of the short cross coinage and the development of the classification system in used today. Information from the original written records has been invaluable in establishing a chronology, and in placing coins of the different types in sequence.
These Royal Numismatic Society Lhotka Prize winning titles are packed full of practical information on this extensive English medieval penny series. They includes tables and many drawings, together with a detailed bibliography for further reading, and notes on such subjects as legend errors, continental imitations and the related issues from Scotland and Ireland.
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The Short-Cross Coinage 1180-1247 by Christopher R. Wren
Paperback, 96 pages
This volume covers coinage of Henry II to Henry III and is part of Christopher Wren’s invaluable trio of guides to Medieval pennies which were first published in the 1990s and are intended as an introduction to assist new collectors and detectorists alike in classifying the coins.
These books give a brief historical context of the short cross coinage and the development of the classification system in used today. Information from the original written records has been invaluable in establishing a chronology, and in placing coins of the different types in sequence.
These Royal Numismatic Society Lhotka Prize winning titles are packed full of practical information on this extensive English medieval penny series. They includes tables and many drawings, together with a detailed bibliography for further reading, and notes on such subjects as legend errors, continental imitations and the related issues from Scotland and Ireland.
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