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Coin (reverse), groat, from reign of James IV

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Postcard of Coin (reverse), groat, from reign of James IV.
000-100-053-440-C
© National Museums Scotland

Coin (reverse), groat, from reign of James IV

This is the reverse of a silver groat minted at Edinburgh between 1489 and 1496, during the reign of James IV. The coin was worth 12 pence Scots.

The reverse has a single long cross with crowns in the 1st and 3rd quarters and an annulet between three pellets in the 2nd and 4th. The Latin inscription translates as: 'God is my Defender and my Redeemer. Town of Edinburgh.'

James IV's coins were mainly continuations of the types issued during the previous reign. Those stylistic changes that did occur were largely backward-looking. No attempt was made to follow James III's example of using a realistic portrait.


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Online ID: 000-100-053-440-C
Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
Project: 0098: National Museums Scotland
Project description | View all records in project
Ref: National Museums Scotland  H.C2988
Date: 1489 - 1496
Between 1489 and 1496
Material: Silver; slightly bent; moderate wear. Inscription: Obv. Cross IACOBVS : Q : DI : GRA : REX : SCOTOR; stops are double annulets; Q represents old Arabic 4; crowned, unclothed bust facing in twelve-arc tressure with trefoils on some cusps / Rev. Cross DnSP
Dimensions: 25.50 mm D / Die Axis: 12.0
What: Coin Type: Heavy coinage, Stewart Ib, Murray B
Coin, groat
Subject: Queen Street Coin Collection
Who: James IV
Where: Scotland, Midlothian, Edinburgh
Event:
Description: James IV silver groat, Edinburgh, 1489 - 1495
References:
  • 'Currency' multimedia programme NMS 1995 
  • Stewart, I.H. 'The Scottish Coinage'. Second Edition. London: Spink & Son, 1967 
Translations:
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