12 Shillings - Charles I (3rd Coinage, 4th Issue) ND (1639-1641) front 12 Shillings - Charles I (3rd Coinage, 4th Issue) ND (1639-1641) back
12 Shillings - Charles I (3rd Coinage, 4th Issue) ND (1639-1641) photo
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12 Shillings - Charles I 3rd Coinage, 4th Issue ND

 
Silver (.925) 6.02 g 31 mm
Description
Issuer
Scotland (United Kingdom, British Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies)
King
Charles I (1625-1649)
Type
Standard circulation coin
Years
1639-1641
Value
12 Shillings (0.6)
Currency
Pound Scots (1136-1707)
Composition
Silver (.925)
Weight
6.02 g
Diameter
31 mm
Shape
Round
Technique
Milled
Orientation
Variable alignment ↺
Demonetized
Yes
Updated
2024-10-09
References
Numista
N#18008
Rarity index
94%

Reverse

Crowned royal arms, 'F' above the crown, crowned 'C' to the left and crowned 'R' to the right.

Script: Latin

Lettering: QVÆ · DEVS · CONIVNXIT · NEMO · SEPARET

Translation: What God hath joined together, let no man put asunder

Comment

Falconer's 2nd issue (4th issue).

Interesting fact

One interesting fact about this coin is that it was minted during a time of great turmoil in Scotland. King Charles I was facing opposition from the Scottish Covenanters, a group of Presbyterian Protestants who opposed the king's attempts to impose Episcopalianism on Scotland. This coin was minted in 1639, just a year before the outbreak of the Bishops' Wars, a series of conflicts between the king's forces and the Covenanters that would ultimately lead to the English Civil War. Despite the turmoil, the coin still bears the image of the king and the inscription "D.G. Rex Scotorum" (God's King of the Scots), reflecting the monarch's continued claim to authority.