Five Guineas: Anne (obverse); Shields and rose (reverse)

Description

The coinage during Anne's reign remained fairly constant to the designs inaugurated in 1662. Before the Act of Union with Scotland (1706), the arms of England and Scotland remained separate, as shown. After the act the two arms were conjoined on one shield. The word Vigo denotes that the coins were struck from gold captured from the Spanish at the Battle of Vigo Bay (1702). Although silver coins bearing the Vigo inscription are less rare, the three gold denominations bearing the symbol are all extremely rare.

Provenance

Reginald Huth (1853-1926), London, England (-1926); Sale: Sotheby's London, 4/4/1927 (4/4/1927); Mrs. Emery May Holden Norweb (1895-1984), Cleveland, OH, gifted to the Cleveland Museum of Art (-1969); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1969-)

Five Guineas: Anne (obverse); Shields and rose (reverse)

[]

1703

Accession Number

1969.203

Medium

gold

Dimensions

Diameter: 2.9 cm (1 1/8 in.)

Classification

Coins

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

The Norweb Collection