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III.

DESCRIPTION

OP ALL THE

COINS OF

OF KING

KING ALFRED

NOW REMAINING.

British Museum.

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Of the coins of Alfred, formerly very rare, we now possess a considerable variety. Some of their types are in the highest degree interesting, and their succession is easily determined by comparison with those of the coins of contemporary princes and prelates, and with one another. 1. ELFERED MX+ Bust to the right.

+ TATA MONETA Moneyer's name between two semicircular segments enclosing his designation.

Pl. I, Fig. 1. 2. + ELFRED MX+

Same types as the last. + DVDD MONETA

W. H. SHEPPARD Esq. Pl. I, fig. 2. The occurrence of the letters MX on these two coins is remarkable. There are coins of Ethelred, the brother and predecessor of Alfred, of the same type as these, which read REX + AEĐELRED M, and might be understood as indicating a claim on the part of Ethelred to the sovereignty of Mercia. But such can hardly be the meaning of these letters on the coins of Alfred. On the contrary, I should prefer taking them, on these, as well as on the coins of Ethelred, as expressing the place of mintage. 3. ELFERED REX

Same types as the above.
TILEPEINE MONETA

BRITISH Museum. Pl. I, Fig. 3. These three coins are very different in their workmanship from

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Essays

British MUSEUM.

those of a similar type which follow; and in this respect they more closely resemble the coin of Ethelred above referred to, than any others of his coins. 4. + AELBRED RE + ? CIALMOD MONETA S Same types as the above.

Pl. I, Fig. 4. This type presents the following names of moneyers ; BIARNVLF DVDD

MANNING TATA BOSA

DVNN OSHERE TIDBALD CIALMOD НЕВЕСА SEFRED TILEPEINE DEIGMVND IARNRED SIGESTEF VVIEARD and

VVLEARD. 5. + AELBRED RE+ Bust to the right.

SIEESTEF MONETA This type differs from the foregoing, having the arcs of the segments broken in the middle, and bent inwards. I know of no other coin of this type.

British MUSEUM. Pl. I, Fig. 5. 6. + AELBRED RE + Bust to the right.

CIALVLF MONETA In three lines separated by bars curved at the ends.

British Museum. Pl. I, Fig. 6. This type presents the following names of moneyers ;

CIALVLF DVINC EĐELVLF. Coins of the three last types are always of very base metal, and, like those of Ethelred and of Burgred King of Mercia, rarely exceed 20 grains in weight. The spelling of the king's name with B is remarkable: no other instance of this spelling is to be found on the coins of Alfred, although the use of B for F in some Saxon names is not uncommon.

I place these coins first, because their resemblance to the coins of Ethelred and Burgred leads me to consider them as being Alfred's earliest coinage. Of that which I think should follow, a fragment only remains.

7.... ED REX Bust to the right. The remains of its reverse shew that when perfect it presented the same type and the same legend, EĐERED MONETA, as the beautiful unique penny of archbishop Ethered, with the head, (probably of Alfred), in the same collection as this.

The two coins which follow are the only ones to which we

BRITISH MUSEUM.

Pl. I. FIG. 7.

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BRITISH MUSEUM,

Pl. I, Fig. 8.

cannot satisfactorily assign a place in the series, as they are quite different in their types from all the rest. 8. ÆLFRED + Bust to the right.

ÆT GLEAPA A tau connected at its extremities with the edge of the piece by beaded lines.

This coin is remarkable, not only on account of its type, but for the legend on the reverse being in Saxon, instead of in Latin, for the prefix ÆT to the name of the mint, and for its being the earliest coin known of that mint, viz. Gloucester. The prefix ÆT to the names of places was not unusual during the Heptarchic period, as any one conversant with charters of that period will acknowledge. The following extracts may be adduced in illustration of this. Bissenos agros quam incolæ hujusce regionis sic vocitant, Æt Ulenbeorge.

CHARTER OF COENRED King of MerCIA, A. D. 709. In loco qui dicitur æt Beathum XC manentium, et in aliis multis locis : hoc est æt Stretforda XXX cassatos; at Sture XXXVIII. Simili etiam vocabulo æt Sture in Usmerum XIIII manentium, Æt Breodune XII, &c.

CHARTER OF HEATHORED BP, OF WORCESTER, A. D. 781. See also the instance At Sandwich. p. 13 of the Harmony of the Chroniclers in this volume. 9. + AELFRÆD REX Written cross-wise.

+ LVDAMON.

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The neatness and elegance of this coin remind us of the coins of Offa king of Mercia; and its reverse type closely resembles that of some of the Mercian coins. The cruciform disposition of the obverse legend finds a parallel on the reverses of the coins of Ethelwulf and Ethelbert.

10. During the progress of some excavations in St Paul's Churchyard, London, in the year 1841, there was found a piece of lead, nearly an inch and a half square, and half an inch thick, having on each side a deeply indented impression from the obverse and reverse of a penny die of Alfred, of the type which next demands our attention. It would seem to have been a trial piece, struck from an unfinished die, and it is defaced on the obverse, apparently to prevent an improper use being made of it. The moneyer's name seems to have been EALDVLF.

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A coin in the British Museum (21), one in Mr Cuff's collection (20) and a fragment in that of the late Sir John Twisden, were

all that were known of this type before the disinterment of the Cuerdale hoard. In that hoard fifteen specimens were found, including the fragments 17 and 18; and of the whole number of this type now known all the important varieties will be found figured in Plate II.

11. + ÆLFRED REX SA + Bust to the right.

EADVLF MONETA

A cross saltire within a lozenge, which is connected with the margin of the coin by a beaded line; three pellets at one side.

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REV. T. F. DYMOCK. Pl. II, FIG. 1.

Similar bust.

This differs from the preceding

in having a cross bar at each angle of the lozenge.

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connect the lozenge with the margin are not beaded in this

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LIAFVALD MONE

Similar type, with a pellet on each

side of the lozenge externally, and in each angle internally.

REV J. W. MARTIN. Pl. II, FIG. 9.

20.

+ ELFRED REX SAX

Similar bust.

REGINGIED MONETA. This differs from the last in haying crosses instead of pellets on each side of the lozenge.

J. D. CUFF Esq.

Pl. II, Fig. 10.

Pl. II, Pig. 11.

21. X AELFRED REX Similar bust.

+ DIARMVND Similar type, a cross within the lozenge, and a crescent attached to each side of the beaded lines which connect the lozenge with the margin.

BRITISH MUSEUM.
22. X AELFRED REX Similar bust.
+ BVRGNOÐ

Similar type; a pellet at each side of the lozenge, another in each angle of the cross enclosed therein, and a curved line connecting each opposite pair of crescents.

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WILLIAM ASSH ETON Esq., ' Pl. II, fig. 13.

23. + ELFRED REX Similar bust.

+ TIRVVALD Similar type; a bar across each side of the lozenge; a plain marginal line within the usual beaded margin ; two of the lines connecting the lozenge with the margin indented, two plain.

The date of execution of these coins is ascertained by their resemblance to the more common type of those of Ceolwulf II, king of Mercia, A. D. 874. The busts differ on all, but some, especially 13 and 15, are close imitations of those on the coins of the Roman emperors, and the diadem on all is clearly of Roman origin. There is a marked difference in workmanship between those which read REX SAXONUM and those which read simply REX. The former were probably minted in Alfred's paternal dominions of Wessex.

The following are all the names of moneyers which occur on coins of this type :

BVRGNOÐ EADVLF LVLLA VVLFRED
CIOLVVLF EALDVLF TORHTMVND
DIA RMVND HEAHSTAN REGINGIED
DVNNA

LIAFVALD TIRVVALD Before I proceed to notice the coins of Alfred which come next in succession, I must draw the attention of my readers to two coins which are not indeed English, but are the evidence of the former existence of English coins of the same type, and hold out to us the expectation of such being discovered at some future time. In my Essay on the coins of East Anglia, I have noticed

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