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Research Coins: Feature Auction

 
Sale: CNG 75, Lot: 1393. Estimate $1000. 
Closing Date: Wednesday, 23 May 2007. 
Sold For $800. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

ANGLO-SAXON, Secondary Sceattas. Circa 710-725. AR Sceat (1.17 g). Series J, type 37. Two diademed heads confronted; between, long cross with trident end; double border / Cross, at each end a bird right; double border. Beowulf 57 (this coin); Abramson J400; Metcalf 296-9; North 135; SCBC 792. Good VF, toned.



From the Beowulf Collection. Ex Finn FPL (Spring 1994), no. 16.

The iconography of confronted heads to either side of a cross has a debatable origin. Prototypes can be seen in certain Merovingian issues, ultimately deriving from Byzantine types for joint rulers, but non-numismatic possibilities point to other meanings. Most notably, the type may signify a relationship, either between people (e.g., marriage or alliance) or concepts (e.g., the holy and the secular) (Gannon pp. 37-39). Regarding the reverse, there are multiple varieties of types depicting birds and crosses, all reflecting Christian iconography: the Holy Spirit, in the form of a dove, and the cross. The diverse array of prototypes, both from numismatics and elsewhere, account for the many variations in their style and presentation (Gannon, pp. 107-112).