World Coins - Silver & Bronze

  PrevNext  

Lot 3675    Session 11 (9.30am Thur 25 Nov)    World Coins - Silver & Bronze

Estimate $1,250
Bid at live.noble.com.au
SOLD $1,180

ITALY, Milano (Duchi), Galeazzo Maria Sforza, (1466-1476), silver testone (9.50 grams), obv. around GALEAZ ú M ú SF ú VICECOS ú DVX ú MLI ú QIT, mitred head with armored bust to right, pellet-in-annulet to left, rev. around P P ú ANGLIE ú Q3 ú CO ú AG ú IANVE ú D, a crested helmet left above familial coat-of-arms of Sforza, branding irons with buckets to left and right, G3 M across field (Cf. CNI V 67 (legends); Morosini 8; Crippa 6/B; Biaggi 1548). Toned, very fine/good very fine and rare.

Ex Triton XIII (lot 1858). The Sforza ("Strivers") dynasty began as many Italian noble houses did, with a successful condottiere (mercenary soldier) seeking respectability for his family by procuring a title and an estate. Muzio Attendolo (1369-1424) founded the family, and his son Francesco seized the Duchy of Milan in 1450, having first married the daughter of Maria Philippo Visconti. Francesco's son Galeazzo succeeded him in 1466 and sought to have his position elevated to king, marrying the sister-in-law of the king of France to strengthen his claims. His rule over Milan was harsh, with heavy taxes causing widespread discontent, but his patronage of grand artists and architects was a source of great pride for the city, and his assassination in 1476 by republican sympathizers was met with mixed feelings. In any case, the dynasty survived, in the person of his weak son, Gian Galeazzo. Originating in Renaissance Milan, where it was first issued in 1468, the testone was a large denomination of good silver and was so-called because its obverse bore a naturalistically-styled head (testa) of the reigning duke. Owing to the influx of silver as a result of trade fuelled by new sources of ore, the Milanese Sforza family used the denomination to promote their power and regional influence. They followed Renaissance artistic principles, and the portraits of the family are presented in a more naturalistic and accurate manner than the more stylized medieval portraits. Like the French gros tournois of the thirteenth century, the testone gained popular acceptance and soon other areas in Italy began minting similar coins, bearing portraits of their own rulers. By the end of the fifteenth century, France, England, and Scotland began minting their own versions, known as the teston in France, and the testoon in England and Scotland, these coins with their Renaissance-style portraits may be viewed as the first modern European coinages.

Estimate / sale price does not include buyer's premium (currently 22% including GST) which is added to hammer price. All bids are executed on the understanding that the Terms & Conditions of sale have been read and accepted. For information on grading and estimates please refer to the Buying at Auction advice.

Quick find

View a lot by number and sale.

Adjacent lots

  • Lot 3673  

    ITALY, Lombardy-Venetia, Revolutionary Provisional Government, five lire, 1848M (KM.C.22.1); Sardinia, Carlo Alberto, five lire, 1842P, ...

    Estimate $200

  • Lot 3674  

    ITALY, Lucca, Henry II (1004-1024) - Henry III (1039-1125), silver denier, obv. H in centre ...

    Estimate $100

  • Lot 3675   This lot

    ITALY, Milano (Duchi), Galeazzo Maria Sforza, (1466-1476), silver testone (9.50 grams), obv. around GALEAZ ú ...

    Estimate $1,250

  • Lot 3676  

    ITALY, Milan, bronze token for twenty centimes, 1906 International Exposition. Extremely fine.

    Estimate $50

  • Lot 3677  

    ITALY, Kingdom of Naples, Ferdinand IV, silver piastra of 120 grana, 1798 P M/A P ...

    Estimate $160