REEPHAM, ENGLAND—BBC News reports that a metal detectorist found two gold coins minted during the reign of Edward III in eastern England in 2019. The king re-introduced gold coins to England at a time when only silver pennies were in circulation. “The royal treasury might talk in terms of pounds, shillings and pence, but the physical reality was sacks of silver pennies,” said Helen Geake of the British Museum. One of the coins, known as a leopard for the two leopards’ heads depicted on the obverse, was minted in 1344 and worth three shillings. This coin was withdrawn from circulation within months. “For some reason they didn’t catch on, but when one or two pennies were the equivalent of a day’s wages at today’s minimum wage rate, perhaps very few people used them,” Geake said. The so-called leopard was replaced with the other coin, known as a noble, which was minted between 1351 and 1352 and worth six shillings and eight pence. Finding the coins together suggests that the leopard was in use for much longer than previously thought. The Black Death, which reached England in 1348, probably slowed down its removal from circulation, Geake explained. To read about a cache of eleventh-century silver pennies unearthed in southwestern England, go to "Norman Conquest Coin Hoard," one of ARCHAEOLOGY's Top 10 Discoveries of 2019.
Medieval Gold Coins Unearthed in Eastern England
News June 22, 2021
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2021
The Age of Glass
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2021
Laws of the Land
Digs & Discoveries March/April 2021
An Enduring Design
Artifacts November/December 2020
Illuminated Manuscript
-
Features May/June 2021
Last Stand of the Hunter-Gatherers?
The 11,000-year-old stone circles of Göbekli Tepe in modern Turkey may have been monuments to a vanishing way of life
(Vincent J. Musi) -
Letter from Australia May/June 2021
Where the World Was Born
Newly discovered rock art panels depict how ancient Aboriginal ancestors envisioned climate change and creation
(Courtesy Paul Tacon) -
Artifacts May/June 2021
Magdalenian Wind Instrument
(Courtesy Carole Fritz et al. 2021/CNRS – the French National Centre for Scientific Research) -
Digs & Discoveries May/June 2021
You Are How You Cook
(loraks/iStock)