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"Gun Money" Coin 1689 - Image 1
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"Gun Money" Coin 1689

  • 22 hours
  • 58 views
  • Blackrock, Co. Dublin
€175

Description

"Gun Money" Coin 1689 "Gun Money" coin, dated November 1689. Framed The Williamite – Jacobite War (1689-1691) was fought between the forces of the deposed Catholic King James II, and his Protestant son-in-law, William of Orange. James II had fled to France in 1688, only to return the following year to re-establish his throne, which by this time had been passed to his daughter, Mary, and her Dutch husband. Though largely supported by the overwhelmingly Catholic population of Ireland, James lacked the funds to prosecute a war. In order to pay his troops, he resorted to desperate measures. James issued an emergency coinage, a so-called ‘money of necessity’. This was essentially a token coinage made from base metal, which was to be exchanged for silver and gold once the war had been won and James reinstated as King. Brass and scrap metal from objects such as church bells and old cannon was melted down for production, as were some guns, which is how it earned the nickname "gunmoney". Though unusual due to their metal content, the coins also broke with tradition by displaying the month as well as year of issue on their reverse. It is thought that this was done in order to facilitate a system whereby they could be redeemed in stages over a period of time. The coinage was dependent upon supplies of metal and in 1690 supplies of scrap metal, as with silver and gold, were beginning to dry up. James’s war expenses at the time were £100,000 per month, so he desperately needed to source the material from somewhere. At one point, a letter was written from a mint official in Dublin to the Master General of Ordnance, asking him to deliver two brass cannon that were lying in the courtyard of Dublin Castle. James’s exiled Queen, Mary of Modena, was asked to source scrap metal in France and some coins, such as the large half-crown, were re-struck. The Battle of the Boyne in July 1690 was the turning point of the "War of the Kings". James II was defeated by William of Orange, gra

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