View larger image © Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery Additional ImagesClick on each image below to view at full size: |
Basic Information | Accession Number: | 1993C476 |
---|
Collection: | Antiquities - Ancient & Mediaeval Coins |
---|
Date: | 890 AD - 923 AD |
---|
|
Maker Information | Moneyer: | Hunfrith - View biography for Hunfrith |
---|
Notes | In the later 7th century the Anglo-Saxons changed from using gold to silver coins. Their earliest silver coins are known today as sceattas. Struck between c 675 and c 750, they are thick dumpy little coins normally without anything written on them. In the late 700's the Anglo-Saxons started making thinner, broader coins which we call pennies. They usually name the king who issued them and the moneyer who was responsible for making them. Pennies like these were made in England for hundreds of years. This penny was struck for the Archbishop of Canterbury . The letters DORO at the centre of the obverse stand for Dorovonia, the Latin name for Canterbury, where the coin was probably made. | Ian Donal Finney Bequest, 1993. |
Further Information | Reign: | Plegmund |
---|
Production Period: | Saxon |
---|
Material(s): | Silver |
---|
Denomination: | Penny |
---|
Currency: | England |
Associated People | | Dimensions | Diameter: | 21 mm |
---|
|