A View of the Silver Coin and Coinage of England, from the Norman Conquest to the Present Time Consider'd with Regard to Type, Legend, Sorts, Rarity, Weight, Fineness and Value with Copper Plates
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A View of the Silver Coin and Coinage of England, from the Norman Conquest to the Present Time Consider'd with Regard to Type, Legend, Sorts, Rarity, Weight, Fineness and Value with Copper Plates
- Publication date
- 1762
- Usage
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
- Topics
- thofe, fame, alfo, firft, thefe, coined, reverfe, weight, pound weight, fine gold, half groat, fine filver, half crown, thefe pieces, silver coin, weight troy, pound sterling
- Publisher
- T. Snelling
- Collection
- europeanlibraries
- Book from the collections of
- unknown library
- Language
- English
- Addeddate
- 2014-09-20 13:09:45
- Google-id
- 12AGAAAAQAAJ
- Identifier
- bub_gb_12AGAAAAQAAJ
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t0wq2sg52
- Ocr
- ABBYY FineReader 9.0
- Pages
- 441
- Scanner
- Worldcat (source edition)
- 13602302
- Year
- 1762
comment
Reviews
Reviewer: pcornelius - favoritefavoritefavoritefavorite - January 29, 2015
Subject: Multiple books bound together
Subject: Multiple books bound together
Commencing from page 95 of the PDF is the same author's "View of the Gold Coin and Coinage of England, from Henry the Third to the Present Time, Consider'd with regard to Type, Legend, Sorts, Rarity, Weight Fineness, Value, and Proportion" (1763).
From p.153 is "A View of the Copper Coin and Coinage of England, including the Leaden, Tin, and Laton [brass] Tokens made by Tradesmen during the Reigns of Elizabeth and James I; the Farthing Tokens of James I and Charles I; those of Towns and Corporations under the Commonwealth and Charles II, and the Tin Farthings and Halfpence of Charles II, James II, and William and Mary" (1766).
From p. 221 is "A View of the Origin, Nature, and Use of Jettons or Counters, especially those commonly known by the Name of Black Money and Abbey Pieces; with a sketch of the Manner of Reckoning with them, and its Affinity with that of the Roman Abacus, the Chinese Soan Pan, and the Russian Shtchota" (1769).
From p.255, "Miscellaneous Views of the coins struck by English Princes in France, Counterfeit Sterlings, Coins struck by the East India Company, those in the West India Colonies, and in the Isle of Man. Also of Pattern Piece for Gold and Silver Coins, and Gold Nobles struck Abroad in Imitation of English" (1769).
From p.327, "A View of the Silver Coin and Coinage of Scotland, from Alexander the First to the Union of the Two Kingdoms, considered with Regard to Type, Legend, Sorts, Weight, Fineness, and Value, to which are added, four Plates of the Gold, Billon, and Copper Coins of the same Kingdom" (posthumous, 1774). This contains an "Advertisement to the Reader" advising :
The following Work was nearly finished, the Plates engraved, and the greatest Part printed, before the Author's Death ; the three Plates of the Gold Coins, and one of the Billon and Copper, were also engraved ; but no Materials sufficient for a compleat Illustration being left, we must confess our Inability to explain them, and with the Lovers of this Branch of Antiquity deplore the Loss of so valuable a Man. — The Editors, August 21, 1774.
From p.371, "Thirty Three Plates of English Medals, by the late Mr Thomas Snelling" (1776).
Some of the copper plates, especially near the beginning of the volume, and incompletely scanned, and not all the scans are easily to be made out.
From p.153 is "A View of the Copper Coin and Coinage of England, including the Leaden, Tin, and Laton [brass] Tokens made by Tradesmen during the Reigns of Elizabeth and James I; the Farthing Tokens of James I and Charles I; those of Towns and Corporations under the Commonwealth and Charles II, and the Tin Farthings and Halfpence of Charles II, James II, and William and Mary" (1766).
From p. 221 is "A View of the Origin, Nature, and Use of Jettons or Counters, especially those commonly known by the Name of Black Money and Abbey Pieces; with a sketch of the Manner of Reckoning with them, and its Affinity with that of the Roman Abacus, the Chinese Soan Pan, and the Russian Shtchota" (1769).
From p.255, "Miscellaneous Views of the coins struck by English Princes in France, Counterfeit Sterlings, Coins struck by the East India Company, those in the West India Colonies, and in the Isle of Man. Also of Pattern Piece for Gold and Silver Coins, and Gold Nobles struck Abroad in Imitation of English" (1769).
From p.327, "A View of the Silver Coin and Coinage of Scotland, from Alexander the First to the Union of the Two Kingdoms, considered with Regard to Type, Legend, Sorts, Weight, Fineness, and Value, to which are added, four Plates of the Gold, Billon, and Copper Coins of the same Kingdom" (posthumous, 1774). This contains an "Advertisement to the Reader" advising :
The following Work was nearly finished, the Plates engraved, and the greatest Part printed, before the Author's Death ; the three Plates of the Gold Coins, and one of the Billon and Copper, were also engraved ; but no Materials sufficient for a compleat Illustration being left, we must confess our Inability to explain them, and with the Lovers of this Branch of Antiquity deplore the Loss of so valuable a Man. — The Editors, August 21, 1774.
From p.371, "Thirty Three Plates of English Medals, by the late Mr Thomas Snelling" (1776).
Some of the copper plates, especially near the beginning of the volume, and incompletely scanned, and not all the scans are easily to be made out.
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