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#1
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PING: Billy
I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series.
I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James |
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#2
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PING: Billy
In a recent message "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote:
I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series. I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James I have dealt with this on my website to a certain extent. Basically, from the reign of James II up until the Great Recoinage of the second decade of the 19th Century, the small silver coins from 1d to 4d were primarily used for the Maundy Ceremony, but were sometimes also issued for circulation. After the Great Recoinage in the reign of George III, they were used almost exclusively for the Royal Maundy, including the 3d, which was reintroduced for circulation during the reign of Victoria. I say almost, because it is known that some denominations were used in certain British colonies. -- Tony Clayton Coins of the UK : http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk Sent using RISCOS on an Acorn Strong Arm RiscPC .... Never put off to tomorrow what you can wiggle out of today. |
#3
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PING: Billy
Tony Clayton wrote:
In a recent message "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series. I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James I have dealt with this on my website to a certain extent. Basically, from the reign of James II up until the Great Recoinage of the second decade of the 19th Century, the small silver coins from 1d to 4d were primarily used for the Maundy Ceremony, but were sometimes also issued for circulation. After the Great Recoinage in the reign of George III, they were used almost exclusively for the Royal Maundy, including the 3d, which was reintroduced for circulation during the reign of Victoria. I say almost, because it is known that some denominations were used in certain British colonies. I know that Americans and Britons are separated by a common language 8), but I'm having trouble with the subtle difference between "primarily" and "almost exclusively." Both allow exceptions of undefined magnitude. I have always been under the impression that the coins used in the colonies were the 1 1/2 pence silvers and the various fractions of farthings. There was a 4d used in one of the colonies, but IIRC it has a design totally different from the Maundy 4d. The reason I posed the original question is this: I often see catalog and dealer listings for pre-1820s Maundy sets as having "uniform dates." This implies that the coins were issued in a group, for a particular Maundy ceremony, but it appears to me that such sets are often hand-assembled from circulation coinage and then advertised somewhat misleadingly. James |
#4
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PING: Billy
"Tony Clayton" wrote in message ... In a recent message "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series. I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James I have dealt with this on my website to a certain extent. Basically, from the reign of James II up until the Great Recoinage of the second decade of the 19th Century, the small silver coins from 1d to 4d were primarily used for the Maundy Ceremony, but were sometimes also issued for circulation. After the Great Recoinage in the reign of George III, they were used almost exclusively for the Royal Maundy, including the 3d, which was reintroduced for circulation during the reign of Victoria. I say almost, because it is known that some denominations were used in certain British colonies. -- Tony Clayton Coins of the UK : http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk Sent using RISCOS on an Acorn Strong Arm RiscPC ... Never put off to tomorrow what you can wiggle out of today. Coincraft's Catalogue has it that up to 1820 the small silver coins were made primarily for circulation and from 1822 they were minted mainly for Maundy sets. From this it could be construed that there are no actual Maundy Sets prior to 1822, earlier "sets" are just four silver coins that probably have nothing to connect them to a Maundy ceremony. Billy |
#5
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PING: Billy
In a recent message "note.boy" wrote:
"Tony Clayton" wrote in message ... In a recent message "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series. I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James I have dealt with this on my website to a certain extent. Basically, from the reign of James II up until the Great Recoinage of the second decade of the 19th Century, the small silver coins from 1d to 4d were primarily used for the Maundy Ceremony, but were sometimes also issued for circulation. After the Great Recoinage in the reign of George III, they were used almost exclusively for the Royal Maundy, including the 3d, which was reintroduced for circulation during the reign of Victoria. I say almost, because it is known that some denominations were used in certain British colonies. -- Tony Clayton Coins of the UK : http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk Sent using RISCOS on an Acorn Strong Arm RiscPC ... Never put off to tomorrow what you can wiggle out of today. Coincraft's Catalogue has it that up to 1820 the small silver coins were made primarily for circulation and from 1822 they were minted mainly for Maundy sets. From this it could be construed that there are no actual Maundy Sets prior to 1822, earlier "sets" are just four silver coins that probably have nothing to connect them to a Maundy ceremony. Billy Indeed, it is known that at some ceremonies only 1d were used. Furthermore, in some years old dies were used, particularly for George III pre-1820. Because of their later use as Maundy coins, the name is applied to early tiny silver coins that have the crown over numeral style. -- Tony Clayton Coins of the UK : http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk Sent using RISCOS on an Acorn Strong Arm RiscPC .... Never take a beer to a job interview. |
#6
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PING: Billy
note.boy wrote:
"Tony Clayton" wrote in message ... In a recent message "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series. I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James I have dealt with this on my website to a certain extent. Basically, from the reign of James II up until the Great Recoinage of the second decade of the 19th Century, the small silver coins from 1d to 4d were primarily used for the Maundy Ceremony, but were sometimes also issued for circulation. After the Great Recoinage in the reign of George III, they were used almost exclusively for the Royal Maundy, including the 3d, which was reintroduced for circulation during the reign of Victoria. I say almost, because it is known that some denominations were used in certain British colonies. -- Tony Clayton Coins of the UK : http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk Sent using RISCOS on an Acorn Strong Arm RiscPC ... Never put off to tomorrow what you can wiggle out of today. Coincraft's Catalogue has it that up to 1820 the small silver coins were made primarily for circulation and from 1822 they were minted mainly for Maundy sets. From this it could be construed that there are no actual Maundy Sets prior to 1822, earlier "sets" are just four silver coins that probably have nothing to connect them to a Maundy ceremony. Billy As I mentioned to Tony, I am troubled by the words "primarily" and "mainly," words which allow wiggle room. Last evening, before I made the OP, I spent some time with my Coincraft (yes, believe it or not, some of us Yanks own them and read them!), comparing it with Spink, as well as with Tony's website. I guess I'm one of these people who seek regularity and consistency of definition. What you say here, though, makes sense as a workable guideline for collecting these things. Thanks! James |
#7
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PING: Billy
Tony Clayton wrote:
In a recent message "note.boy" wrote: "Tony Clayton" wrote in message ... In a recent message "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series. I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James I have dealt with this on my website to a certain extent. Basically, from the reign of James II up until the Great Recoinage of the second decade of the 19th Century, the small silver coins from 1d to 4d were primarily used for the Maundy Ceremony, but were sometimes also issued for circulation. After the Great Recoinage in the reign of George III, they were used almost exclusively for the Royal Maundy, including the 3d, which was reintroduced for circulation during the reign of Victoria. I say almost, because it is known that some denominations were used in certain British colonies. -- Tony Clayton Coins of the UK : http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk Sent using RISCOS on an Acorn Strong Arm RiscPC ... Never put off to tomorrow what you can wiggle out of today. Coincraft's Catalogue has it that up to 1820 the small silver coins were made primarily for circulation and from 1822 they were minted mainly for Maundy sets. From this it could be construed that there are no actual Maundy Sets prior to 1822, earlier "sets" are just four silver coins that probably have nothing to connect them to a Maundy ceremony. Billy Indeed, it is known that at some ceremonies only 1d were used. Furthermore, in some years old dies were used, particularly for George III pre-1820. Because of their later use as Maundy coins, the name is applied to early tiny silver coins that have the crown over numeral style. The old Craig catalogs seem to corroborate the notion that the one-penny denomination was the one of choice for Maundy ceremonies, even though those books only cover the reigns of Geo II through William IV. As you say, the larger denominations, in their similarity of appearance and fabric, are classified as Maundy coins, even though they were not. Then later, the use of the four denominations in ceremony further strengthened the tendency to lump all of the tiny coins together. Neat. This is part of what makes numismatics so fascinating. Thanks for taking the time to stay with this, Tony. James |
#8
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PING: Billy
On Feb 19, 3:10*pm, "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote:
Tony Clayton wrote: In a recent message "note.boy" wrote: "Tony Clayton" wrote in message ... In a recent message "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series. I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? *Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James I have dealt with this on my website to a certain extent. Basically, from the reign of James II up until the Great Recoinage of the second decade of the 19th Century, the small silver coins from 1d to 4d were primarily used for the Maundy Ceremony, but were sometimes also issued for circulation. After the Great Recoinage in the reign of George III, they were used almost exclusively for the Royal Maundy, including the 3d, which was reintroduced for circulation during the reign of Victoria. I say almost, because it is known that some denominations were used in certain British colonies. -- Tony Clayton * * * * * Coins of the UK * * *:http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk Sent using RISCOS on an Acorn Strong Arm RiscPC ... Never put off to tomorrow what you can wiggle out of today. Coincraft's Catalogue has it that up to 1820 the small silver coins were made primarily for circulation and from 1822 they were minted mainly for Maundy sets. From this it could be construed that there are no actual Maundy Sets prior to 1822, earlier "sets" are just four silver coins that probably have nothing to connect them to a Maundy ceremony. *Billy Indeed, it is known that at some ceremonies only 1d were used. Furthermore, in some years old dies were used, particularly for George III pre-1820. Because of their later use as Maundy coins, the name is applied to early tiny silver coins that have the crown over numeral style. The old Craig catalogs seem to corroborate the notion that the one-penny denomination was the one of choice for Maundy ceremonies, even though those books only cover the reigns of Geo II through William IV. *As you say, the larger denominations, in their similarity of appearance and fabric, are classified as Maundy coins, even though they were not. *Then later, the use of the four denominations in ceremony further strengthened the tendency to lump all of the tiny coins together. *Neat. *This is part of what makes numismatics so fascinating. Thanks for taking the time to stay with this, Tony. James- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - This rambling doesn't add much, but I will chime in: Please note that even today, mon vieux, each recipient gets an odd number of coins - so many "sets" of four totaling a sum of 10 pence, plus odd coins, so that the distribution of silver maundy money matches the soveriegn's age. It strikes me that all Maundy Sets are "put together" by the dealers who buy the coins up from the pensioners. Does the Royal Mint even seal the sets of four together today??? If so, when did they start doing that??? And, of course, from the odd extra pence most in years (when the sovereigns age is not readily divisible by ten) comes the idea of "oddments". The idea that a Maundy Set before Victoria's Silver Jubilee has been "put together" doesn't bother me very much, although it's really great if the coins are well matched in state of condition and toning. But I have only a 1951 Maundy set and two 1959 Maundy sets, so the idea of "put together" hardly applies. I have several oddments of George IV, William IV and Elizabeth II. oly |
#9
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PING: Billy
oly wrote:
On Feb 19, 3:10 pm, "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: Tony Clayton wrote: In a recent message "note.boy" wrote: "Tony Clayton" wrote in message ... In a recent message "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series. I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James I have dealt with this on my website to a certain extent. Basically, from the reign of James II up until the Great Recoinage of the second decade of the 19th Century, the small silver coins from 1d to 4d were primarily used for the Maundy Ceremony, but were sometimes also issued for circulation. After the Great Recoinage in the reign of George III, they were used almost exclusively for the Royal Maundy, including the 3d, which was reintroduced for circulation during the reign of Victoria. I say almost, because it is known that some denominations were used in certain British colonies. -- Tony Clayton Coins of the UK :http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk Sent using RISCOS on an Acorn Strong Arm RiscPC ... Never put off to tomorrow what you can wiggle out of today. Coincraft's Catalogue has it that up to 1820 the small silver coins were made primarily for circulation and from 1822 they were minted mainly for Maundy sets. From this it could be construed that there are no actual Maundy Sets prior to 1822, earlier "sets" are just four silver coins that probably have nothing to connect them to a Maundy ceremony. Billy Indeed, it is known that at some ceremonies only 1d were used. Furthermore, in some years old dies were used, particularly for George III pre-1820. Because of their later use as Maundy coins, the name is applied to early tiny silver coins that have the crown over numeral style. The old Craig catalogs seem to corroborate the notion that the one-penny denomination was the one of choice for Maundy ceremonies, even though those books only cover the reigns of Geo II through William IV. As you say, the larger denominations, in their similarity of appearance and fabric, are classified as Maundy coins, even though they were not. Then later, the use of the four denominations in ceremony further strengthened the tendency to lump all of the tiny coins together. Neat. This is part of what makes numismatics so fascinating. Thanks for taking the time to stay with this, Tony. James- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - This rambling doesn't add much, but I will chime in: Please note that even today, mon vieux, each recipient gets an odd number of coins - so many "sets" of four totaling a sum of 10 pence, plus odd coins, so that the distribution of silver maundy money matches the soveriegn's age. It strikes me that all Maundy Sets are "put together" by the dealers who buy the coins up from the pensioners. Does the Royal Mint even seal the sets of four together today??? If so, when did they start doing that??? And, of course, from the odd extra pence most in years (when the sovereigns age is not readily divisible by ten) comes the idea of "oddments". The idea that a Maundy Set before Victoria's Silver Jubilee has been "put together" doesn't bother me very much, although it's really great if the coins are well matched in state of condition and toning. But I have only a 1951 Maundy set and two 1959 Maundy sets, so the idea of "put together" hardly applies. I have several oddments of George IV, William IV and Elizabeth II. I just LOVE the word "oddments" - it seems so British! Well, sure, the "sets" are put together after the fact, and always have been. The difference is probably one of delay. There were few, if any, dealers in the 18th or early 19th centuries to put sets together. Thus, "sets" of those dates we have today were put together decades or centuries after the coins were made. I would guess that more recently the "sets" were assembled within days or weeks of coin distribution. We could argue over whether it makes a difference, and why, but let's not. What ever happened to Fred Rayner of Milwaukee? He used to advertise in World Coin News and sell all sorts of British coins by mail. All you had to do was to leave your order with Diane. I was introduced to that word through those ads. James |
#10
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PING: Billy
On Feb 19, 6:05*pm, "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote:
oly wrote: On Feb 19, 3:10 pm, "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: Tony Clayton wrote: In a recent message "note.boy" wrote: "Tony Clayton" wrote in message ... In a recent message "Mr. Jaggers" lugburzman[at]yahoo[dot]com wrote: I'm trying to make sense of the Maundy series. I know that the Maundy 3 pence and the circulation threepence have different designs starting with Victoria. I suspect that 1, 2, and 4 pence starting with William IV were made exclusively as Maundy coins. But what about silver 1, 2, 3, and 4 pence of George IV and earlier? Are all of them be considered as either circulation coins or Maundy coins? James I have dealt with this on my website to a certain extent. Basically, from the reign of James II up until the Great Recoinage of the second decade of the 19th Century, the small silver coins from 1d to 4d were primarily used for the Maundy Ceremony, but were sometimes also issued for circulation. After the Great Recoinage in the reign of George III, they were used almost exclusively for the Royal Maundy, including the 3d, which was reintroduced for circulation during the reign of Victoria. I say almost, because it is known that some denominations were used in certain British colonies. -- Tony Clayton Coins of the UK :http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk Sent using RISCOS on an Acorn Strong Arm RiscPC ... Never put off to tomorrow what you can wiggle out of today. Coincraft's Catalogue has it that up to 1820 the small silver coins were made primarily for circulation and from 1822 they were minted mainly for Maundy sets. From this it could be construed that there are no actual Maundy Sets prior to 1822, earlier "sets" are just four silver coins that probably have nothing to connect them to a Maundy ceremony. Billy Indeed, it is known that at some ceremonies only 1d were used. Furthermore, in some years old dies were used, particularly for George III pre-1820. Because of their later use as Maundy coins, the name is applied to early tiny silver coins that have the crown over numeral style. The old Craig catalogs seem to corroborate the notion that the one-penny denomination was the one of choice for Maundy ceremonies, even though those books only cover the reigns of Geo II through William IV. As you say, the larger denominations, in their similarity of appearance and fabric, are classified as Maundy coins, even though they were not. Then later, the use of the four denominations in ceremony further strengthened the tendency to lump all of the tiny coins together. Neat. This is part of what makes numismatics so fascinating. Thanks for taking the time to stay with this, Tony. James- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - This rambling doesn't add much, but I will chime in: Please note that even today, mon vieux, each recipient gets an odd number of coins - so many "sets" of four totaling a sum of 10 pence, plus odd coins, so that the distribution of silver maundy money matches the soveriegn's age. *It strikes me that all Maundy Sets are "put together" by the dealers who buy the coins up from the pensioners. *Does the Royal Mint even seal the sets of four together today??? *If so, when did they start doing that??? *And, of course, from the odd extra pence most in years (when the sovereigns age is not readily divisible by ten) comes the idea of "oddments". The idea that a Maundy Set before Victoria's Silver Jubilee has been "put together" doesn't bother me very much, although it's really great if the coins are well matched in state of condition and toning. But I have only a 1951 Maundy set and two 1959 Maundy sets, so the idea of "put together" hardly applies. *I have several oddments of George IV, William IV and Elizabeth II. I just LOVE the word "oddments" - it seems so British! Well, sure, the "sets" are put together after the fact, and always have been. *The difference is probably one of delay. *There were few, if any, dealers in the 18th or early 19th centuries to put sets together. *Thus, "sets" of those dates we have today were put together decades or centuries after the coins were made. *I would guess that more recently the "sets" were assembled within days or weeks of coin distribution. *We could argue over whether it makes a difference, and why, but let's not. What ever happened to Fred Rayner of Milwaukee? *He used to advertise in World Coin News and sell all sorts of British coins by mail. *All you had to do was to leave your order with Diane. *I was introduced to that word through those ads. James- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I don't think I knew that gentleman; perhaps I saw his stuff at MECCA. FWIW, From the 1880s through about 1905, far more Maundy sets were made than necessary for the requirements of the ceremony. Edward VII stopped this practice about 1905-1907, as it lowered the value of the actual gift coins to the recipients. Also, the sovereign did not personally participate in the Maundy ceremony much after 1714 (the year of the death of Queen Anne) until George V started attending again about 1932-33. The first public ceremony of Queen Elizabeth II was to distribute the Royal Maundy in the spring of 1952, her father, George VI, having died on 6 February of that same year. I have an original press service photograph from that ceremony somewhere in all this mess. oly |
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