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GM27310

Commonwealth 1651 silver pattern Sixpence by Blondeau

Commonwealth (1649-60), pattern milled silver Sixpence, 1651, by Pierre Blondeau, English shield within laurel and palm branch, legends in English language, initial mark sun, THE. COMMONWEALTH. OF. ENGLAND, rev. English and Irish shields, value VI above, beaded circle and legend surrounding, date at top, legend surrounding, .GOD. WITH. VS., edge milled, weight 2.90g (Bull 217 R3; ESC 1498 R3; N.2726; S.3219). Older darker tone, some light wear and surface marks, otherwise very fine for issue and the rarest of the Blondeau patterns.

These milled patterns are the first machine made pieces of the Commonwealth period along with the companion Halfcrowns and Shillings of this date. They were made by the inventor of the machinery for the edge marking process Frenchman Peter Blondeau who ended up in a competition against the hammered workers of the Corporation of Moneyers to see who could produce the best quality pieces for a certain quantity in a certain time. The hammered workers reigned supreme in 1651 rendering these patterns as an enigma of that event.

The Commonwealth coins were the first in the British series to carry English language legends.

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