The Viking Kingdom of York — Jorvik to its inhabitants — controlled the city through a succession of Norse kings whose minting activity was sporadic and politically charged. Issues from this narrow window, roughly the reign of Siefredus and the competing claimants of the early 900s, reflect a mint operating under genuine dynastic instability. Attribution to a specific ruler remains contested among specialists; the "Cnut" designation here likely refers to Cnut of Northumbria, distinct from the later Danish king of England.
North 524 encompasses considerable die variety, and individual specimens frequently resist clean attribution without die-link analysis.
The Viking Kingdom of York — Jorvik to its inhabitants — controlled the city through a succession of Norse kings whose minting activity was sporadic and politically charged. Issues from this narrow window, roughly the reign of Siefredus and the competing claimants of the early 900s, reflect a mint operating under genuine dynastic instability. Attribution to a specific ruler remains contested among specialists; the "Cnut" designation here likely refers to Cnut of Northumbria, distinct from the later Danish king of England.
North 524 encompasses considerable die variety, and individual specimens frequently resist clean attribution without die-link analysis.