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  1. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
  2. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  

    Standard Catalog plate coin

    A43, Lot 20:

    SCOTLAND. Standard Catalog plate coin. James VI. 1567-1625. AV "hat piece" (80 shillings or £4). 4.47 gm. 28 mm. Sixth Coinage. (Mullet i.m.). 1592. His bust right, wearing a tall hat, thistle behind; • IACOBVS • 6 • D • G • R • SCOTORVM • / A crowned lion standing, holding a scepter, a cloud above with יהוה ('Jehova') just above; • TE • SOLVM VEREOR • 1592 • ("Thee alone do I fear"). S. 5457 (this piece illustrated). Burns II: 394:1; pl lxix:952). Near Extremely Fine; very slight scratches on reverse, (fewer than on either of the two pieces sold for substantially more than this estimate in 2021). The "Act of Parliament 6th August 1591" authorized this issue.

    The Leland Scott Collection.

    Ex LaRiviere. Spink. 29 March 2006, lot 151 (just under the equivalent of US$20,000 all in). With his distinctive envelope. ("Very faint scratches in reverse field, a well struck example of this popular and distinctive portrait coin, good very fine, very rare")

    Ex Spink 81. November 1990. (61. "Pleasing good very fine and very rare")

    Ex Cochran-Patrick. Sothebys. 30 March 1936, lot 71.

    Two recent sales of this type in 2021, none since:

    •"AU50", minor edge split, minor hairlines" ($34,000) Photo shows extensive light hairlines in fields, a deeper scratch to the left of the lion on the reverse, some form of deposit in the "R" of SCOTORVM on the obverse

    •"AU55", photo shows bend in front of collar, a scratch extending from the mouth to the inner circle, a bend an a crease mark on the reverse, poor strike at the eye on the obverse. When Spink sold it in March 1997 they called it "a little creased." ($75,000)

  3. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    E37, Lot 55:

    In the name of Drusus Julius Caesar, son of Tiberius. Tiberius & Germanicus Gemellus. A.D. 19-37/8 and 19-23/4, respectively. Æ sestertius. 26.27 gm. 34 mm. Rome mint. Struck under Tiberius, A.D. 22-23. Confronting heads of Drusus's twin sons on crossed cornucopiae, winged caduceus between / DRVSVS CAESAR TI AVG F DIVI AVG N PONT TR POT II around large S C. RIC I 42 (Tiberius). Near Very Fine; glossy dark green patina; minor scattered roughness; scattered breaks in the patina mostly on the edges with corrosion; a bit of verdigris on the reverse at 12'; collector's number "28" written in ink on reverse. Rare.

    This collection of early Roman Imperial bronze was formed by an American collector in the Midwest, buying coins in the 1950's from major London coin houses. He affixed collector 'H' numbers written in ink on lacquer on many of the coins. We have correspondence dated in 1950 and 1951 with Leonard Forrer at Spink & Son, Ltd. and William French at Glendining & Co. Ltd. in London, as well as Earle K. Stanton in Los Angeles, Paul S. Seitz in Pennsylvania, and Edward Gans, Numismatic Fine Arts in New York City.

    Rare, with a fascinating but tragic story. The 'Tiberian dynasty' collapsed within months. Both Drusus and his son Germanicus Gemellus (the boy on the right cornucopia) died in A.D. 23. Drusus' wife Livilla became involved with Tiberius' prefect Sejanus, who induced her to poison her husband. She died shamefully in the aftermath of Sejanus's downfall in A.D. 31. The second grandson, Tiberius Gemellus, named co-heir of Tiberius with Caligula, was sidelined after Tiberius' death and then executed by Caligula, who would not tolerate a second heir to the throne.

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Davissons Ltd uses a soft close for its auctions, which means no lot closes until everyone is done bidding. Every time a bid is placed within the final 40 seconds of a lot closing, the timer is reset to 40 seconds. This continues until no bids are placed for 40 seconds, at which point the lot closes. There will never be more than one lot closing at once, as the next lot is not allowed to begin closing until the current lot closes.

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