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GM25833

William I Penny, Profile right type, Wilton Mint, moneyer Aelfwine

Regular price £5,000
Regular price Sale price £5,000

William I (1066-87),silver profile right type Penny (1080-83?), Wilton Mint, Moneyer Aelfwine, crowned bust right holding sceptre to edge of coin, legend commencing lower left with inner and outer linear circles surrounding both sides, +PILLELM REX,rev.annulet at centre of cross pattee, voided trefoil in each inner angle, +IELFPINE OII PILT, weight 1.22g (SCBI -; BMC type VII; N.847; S.1256).Toned, well centred, weak in parts of legend, a bold very fine and very rare.

The legends translate as "William King of the English" on obverse and on the reverse "Aelfwine of Wilton."

Despite the transition from the Anglo-Saxon to the Norman period, numismatically the three-year change of coin types continued. The profile right type of William is the seventh of the eight types attributed to this reign. According to North the Wilton Mint had up to six moneyers active from type IV in the reign of William the Conqueror.

The first Norman King of England, William the Conqueror born around 1028 was the son of Robert I of Normandy and Herleya. A descendant of Rollo, William became Duke of Normandy in 1035, he subsequently married Matilda of Flanders in the 1050s ensuring a powerful ally in that neighbouring region. After a protracted struggle and quashing rebellions, his hold over Normandy was eventually secure by 1060 and with appointment of supporting abbots and bishops in the Norman church, and he subsequently secured the region of Maine in 1062. William's first cousin once removed was the childless Edward the Confessor of England and from this family connection and that Edward had previously told him he would succeed, he assumed a claim to the throne of England over Harold Godwinson, who Edward had named as his successor on his deathbed in January 1066. William also claimed that Harold previously had promised the throne to him in the event of succession, Harold having sworn over holy relics in William's presence as depicted in the Bayeux tapestry. William therefore built up a powerful invasion force to cross the channel and fight for the right to rule England as of September 1066. He landed at Pevensey Bay and after setting up camp with a basic fort at Hastings he marched north to meet Harold at Senlac Hill at Battle, East Sussex on the 14thOctober. A battle raged for most of the day, with at one point a rumour spread that William was slain resulting in him having to remove his helmet and reveal he was alive and fighting, boosting the morale of the Normans for the final onslaught in which Harold perished, either from an arrow in the eye or cut down by a horseman. William then went on a military tour to put down local uprisings leading to his crowning in Westminster Abbey on Christmas Day. He made arrangements in London for governance for whenever he would be in Normandy, and by 1075 his hold on England was almost complete with many forts and castles constructed. His later years involved quelling other uprisings in Europe and difficulty with his eldest son Robert Curthose, but his most famous achievement in England was the preparation of the Domesday Book in 1086; a survey of the land and the land-owners and nobles within it, listing pre-conquest and current holders at that time. William died in September 1087 leading a campaign in northern France and was buried at Caen. Normandy was given to eldest son Robert, with England given to his next surviving son William Rufus.

Wilton beside the River Nadder and Wylye situated north west of Salisbury is in the Bughal Hidage and Alfred the Great was defeated here in 871. The town was burnt by Swein in 1003 when the mint was moved to Salisbury, with moneyers only returning later from circa 1020. Later the Empress Matilda spent Easter of 1141 here and Stephen suffered a defeat here in 1143.

Provenance:

Ex AMR Coins, circa 2017.

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