The Punched Hammered Coinage of 1696
The Punched Hammered Coinage of 1696. Elizabeth I. 1558-1603. AR groat. 1.78
gm. 23 mm. Second issue. Cross-crosslet
i.m. S. 2556. Worn; punched to establish its acceptance as currency. Extremely rare.
The Great
Recoinage of 1696 was an effort to combat rampant
clipping of earlier hammered issues, both by issuing new coinage featuring
milled edges as proof against clipping and by buying back clipped coinage based
on weight. Coins that were still full weight were certified by means of a punched
hole, as seen on this piece.
We have
no clear record of how many pieces were “rejoined” thus, though this is the
first groat recorded. Many such pieces probably ended
up melted as later collectors assumed the hole was merely damage. The piece is
a metal-detector find along with other coins from the era of hammered coinage.
It is full sized with both rings though underweight from wear; the punch is
off-center but it does preserve the portrait, a
preference that is arguably understandable; the wear and the date of issue more
than satisfy the 50 year requirement; the edges are jagged though somewhat
burnished down from minor friction after the punch.
$350 estimate