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denarius, type IV, Cracow mint (about end 1144-1146)
OBVERSE: A murder or fight scene. This motif is interpreted either as the assassination of Saint Wenceslas or as an allusion to the civil war in Poland that was taking place at the time. Variant with killer's head without helmet.
Pseudolegend
REVERSE: An eagle kills a hare. This is probably an allusion to the idea of the victory of good over evil. In medieval symbolism, the hare symbolised debauchery and cowardice. Marks in the form of wedges in the coin field.
Pseudolegend
NOTE: This coin is characterised by its originality of imagery. There is no analogy in medieval European minting to a scene depicting an eagle and a hare !!! Rare variant with cross in obverse and extra sword in reverse (mintmarks).
A beautifully preserved coin.
Silver, diameter 14 MM, weight 0, 52 G
- ex Rzeszowski Dom Aukcyjny (Poland), auction 17, lot 949. April 2024.
Literature: Stanisław Suchodolski, Chronologia monet Władysława II i Bolesława Kędzierzawego, „Wiadomości Numizmatyczne”, R V. 1961, z. 2-3.
Referenz : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=69kcJWEvcRM
Sammlung : POLAND - THE BEGINNINGS OF MINTING (UNTIL THE END OF 12TH CENTURY)