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1 Shilling - Charles I Group D, 4th bust

Uitgever England
Jaar 1634-1638
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Vorm Round
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Beschrijving voorzijde Fourth laureate and draped bust of King Charles I facing left, struck without an inner circle. The denomination numeral XII appears in the field behind the king's effigy. A continuous Latin legend surrounds the bust within the coin's outer border, identifying the sovereign by name and title.
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Opschrift voorzijde Log in om details te zien
Beschrijving keerzijde Log in om details te zien
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Opschrift keerzijde •CHRISTO AVSPICE REGNO•
(Translation: I reign under the auspices of Christ)
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Aanvullende informatie

Group D shillings mark a transitional period in Nicholas Briot's influence on English coinage — by the mid-1630s, the Tower Mint was absorbing milled-coin techniques while still relying on hammer striking, producing an uneven body of work across the type. The 4th bust is the most commonly encountered of the Charles I shilling busts, though survivors in problem-free silver are genuinely difficult to locate given the type's heavy circulation before the Civil War disrupted mint operations entirely.

Charles I's persistent refusal to call Parliament between 1629 and 1640 — his "Personal Rule" — meant no formal taxation by consent, which in turn drove aggressive use of royal prerogatives including control of the mint for revenue. Ship Money and forced loans of that decade circulated through the same economy as these coins.

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