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Written by Walter Henry Breen
Last Updated
Written by Walter Henry Breen
Last Updated
  • Email

coin

Written by Walter Henry Breen
Last Updated

Ireland

Edward IV [Credit: Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, London]Edward IV [Credit: Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, London]James II [Credit: Courtesy of The National Portrait Gallery, London]James II [Credit: Courtesy of The National Portrait Gallery, London]Irish currency from the 8th to the 10th century consisted mainly of Anglo-Saxon, French, Viking, and Arabic silver; in the later 10th and 11th centuries silver pennies of the Norse kings of Dublin imitated Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian models. There were also thin silver bracteates copying Norman types. Anglo-Irish coinage proper began with silver pennies and halfpence of John (the only coins to bear his name, which did not appear on English coins). Dublin, Waterford, Cork, Limerick, and Trim were striking silver (increasingly base) from groat to farthing from the 13th to the 15th century. The “three crowns” coinage with the saltire cross (the Fitzgerald arms) beside the shield came in with Edward IV and was continued by Richard III and Henry VII. “Harp” groats were struck at Dublin under Henry VIII, followed by his much baser issues. Gold was never coined, but copper was introduced quite early. In Ireland as in England, the English Civil Wars produced a number of siege pieces, notably the money of the Irish peers Inchiquin and Ormonde. For his Irish campaign James II issued his “gun-money” series of brass (made partly from melted-down old cannon), to be redeemed in silver when ... (200 of 32,716 words)

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