Date: c. 1647
Description:
Charles I, Southern Cities of Refuge, Bandon Bridge octagonal farthing (copper)
- Weight: 2.32g
- Diameter: 14mm
- Unrecorded in literature but similar to an ‘undated’ Bandon Bridge farthing
- References: cf. D&F 316 and SCBC 6560
Overall, about very fine. (aVF)
- Extremely rare
- An unrecorded ‘dated’ issue
Obverse:
- Crudely struck emergency coinage with the legend “B. • B” across field, date below “1647”, all within beaded border
- Weakly struck on NE quadrant, but this only affects the beaded border
- Extremely Fine (EF) on obverse
Reverse:
- Damaged, with only outline ‘silhouettes of the ‘three castles’ remaining
- Weakly struck on SW quadrant, but this only affects the beaded border
- The damage to the castles seems to be from filing
- Good (G) on reverse
Country:
- Ireland
Category:
- Anglo-Norman
- House of Stuart
- Charles I
- Cities of Refuge
- Also known as
- Emergency Money
- Money of Necessity
- Also known as
- Cities of Refuge
- Hammered
Further Reading:
- Check List: Irish Tudor & Stuart Coinage
Other Irish Coin Issues of Charles I:
- Irish Coinage during the reign of King Charles I
- O’Brien Coin Guide: Richmond ‘Patent’ Farthings (1625-34)
- O’Brien Coin Guide: Maltravers ‘Patent’ Farthings (1634-36)
- O’Brien Coin Guide: Maltravers ‘Rose’ Farthings (1636-49)
- O’Brien Coin Guide: Introduction to the Emergency Coinages of the Great Rebellion of 1641-49
- Timeline 1640 – Prologue to Rebellion in Ireland & Civil War in England
- Timeline 1641 – The Great Rebellion breaks out in Ireland
- Timeline 1642 – The Great Rebellion in Ireland & Civil War in England
- O’Brien Coin Guide: The Ormonde Money of 1643-44
- O’Brien Rare Coin Review: The Confederate Catholic ‘Rebel Money’ Coinage of 1642-43
- O’Brien Rare Coin Review: The Ormonde Gold ‘Pistole’ of 1646
- O’Brien Rare Coin Review: Coinage of the Cities of Refuge (Bandon 1646-49)
- O’Brien Rare Coin Review: Cork Shilling
- O’Brien Rare Coin Review: Cork Sixpence
- O’Brien Rare Coin Review: Cork Farthing (rectangular, Cork in double circle)
- O’Brien Rare Coin Review: Cork Farthing (rectangular, Cork in circle of pellets)
- O’Brien Rare Coin Review: Cork Farthing (Cork, countermarked on a copper coin) <<< You are here