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Source Description

After ascending to the throne, Charles I ordered that the coinage should remain the same types and denominations as that of James I. Throughout all the troubles of his reign he did not alter the value of the gold coinage. Until the English Civil War started in 1642, the king's authority continued to rule the Tower mint. With the appointment of Sir John Coniers as Lieutenant of the Tower, control of the mint passed into the hands of the Parliamentary party, which continued to strike coins bearing the king's effigy and titles. To keep the Royalist party supplied with money, Charles opened other mints at York, Aberystwyth, Shrewsbury, Oxford, Bristol, Truro, Exeter, Weymouth, and Chester, while a mint operated near Worcester in 1646. During the civil war mints operated in the besieged towns of Carlisle, Colchester, Newark, Pontefract, and Scarborough, and produced a number of irregularly shaped coins of many odd denominations hastily struck from local domestic plate.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
144469
label
Unite: Charles I (obverse); Crowned Shield (reverse)
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
144469
contentType
object
title
Unite: Charles I (obverse); Crowned Shield (reverse)
description
After ascending to the throne, Charles I ordered that the coinage should remain the same types and denominations as that of James I. Throughout all the troubles of his reign he did not alter the value of the gold coinage. Until the English Civil War started in 1642, the king's authority continued to rule the Tower mint. With the appointment of Sir John Coniers as Lieutenant of the Tower, control of the mint passed into the hands of the Parliamentary party, which continued to strike coins bearing the king's effigy and titles. To keep the Royalist party supplied with money, Charles opened other mints at York, Aberystwyth, Shrewsbury, Oxford, Bristol, Truro, Exeter, Weymouth, and Chester, while a mint operated near Worcester in 1646. During the civil war mints operated in the besieged towns of Carlisle, Colchester, Newark, Pontefract, and Scarborough, and produced a number of irregularly shaped coins of many odd denominations hastily struck from local domestic plate.
date
1625
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q79921715
genreSpecific
Coins
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Diameter: 3.4 cm (1 5/16 in.)
cul
England, Charles I, 1625-1649
accession
1969.192
Source extras
tec
gold
tombstone
Unite: Charles I (obverse); Crowned Shield (reverse), 1625. England, Charles I, 1625-1649. Gold; diameter: 3.4 cm (1 5/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Norweb Collection, 1969.192
collection
MED - Numismatics
inscriptions
inscription
CAROLUS D G MAG BR FR ET HI REX. XX
inscription_translation
Charles by the grace of God King of Great Britain France and Ireland, 20 (shillings)
inscription_remark
obverse
inscription
FLORENT CONCORDIA REGNA
inscription_translation
Through concord kingdoms flourish
inscription_remark
reverse
didYouKnow
The gold unite was valued at 20 shillings, the roman numeral XX can be seen on the obverse.
citations
citation
Cleveland Museum of Art, and Emery May Norweb<em>. English Gold Coins, Ancient to Modern Times, On Loan to the Cleveland Museum of Art from the Norweb Collection.</em> [Catalog. 1968.
page_number
p. 51
creditline
The Norweb Collection
updatedAt
2026-05-29 07:25:12.403000
sourceId
144469
dept
Medieval Art
coll
MED - Numismatics
med
gold
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
7fd0757c29332989