Brabant 1485 2 briquet
This specimen was lot 969 in Jean Elsen sale 151 (Brussels, June 2022), where it sold for €550 (about US$687 including buyer's fees). The catalog description[1] noted,
"BRABANT, Duché, Philippe le Beau (1482-1506), AR double briquet, 1485, Anvers. D/ Deux lions assis et affrontés. Entre leurs t., un briquet. R/ Ecu d'Autriche-Bourgogne sur une croix fleuronnée. Rare. Très Beau. (duchy of Brabant, Philip the Fair, 1482-1506, silver double briquet of 1485, Antwerp mint. Obverse: two seated lions facing, between them, a firesteel; reverse: arms of Austria-Burgundy over a floriate cross. Rare, Very Fine.)
Après la mort accidentelle de Marie de Bourgogne, son mari Maximilien de Habsbourg obtint la tutelle de son fils âgé de 4 ans mais les villes de Flandre refusèrent de le reconnaître. Le jeune Philippe le Beau fut emmené à Gand et un traité de paix fut conclu par la Flandre et le Brabant avec Louis XI, qui avait envahi l'Artois, la Bourgogne et la Franche-Comté. Ce n'est qu'en 1485, après avoir pacifié la Hollande et l'évêché d'Utrecht, que Maximilien put soumettre la Flandre et y être reconnu comme régent. Pendant cette période, l'on poursuivit le monnayage de Marie de Bourgogne, principalement composé de florins de Bourgogne et de doubles briquets et briquets en argent. (After the accidental death of Mary of Burgundy, her husband Maximilian of Hapsburg obtained the guardianship of his four year old son but the towns of Flanders refused to recognize him. The young Philip the Fair was taken to Ghent and a peace treaty was concluded by Flanders and Brabant with Louis XI, who had invaded Artois, Burgundy and Franche-Comté. It was not until 1485, after pacifying Holland and the bishop of Utrecht, that Maximilian forced Flanders to recognize him as regent. During this period, he continued the coinage of Mary of Burgundy, principally composed of gold florins and silver briquets and double briquets.)"
This coin is named for the firesteel posed between the two lions, which firesteel later became the badge of Philip II of Spain. This is a very early dated coin.
Recorded mintage: unknown.
Specification: 3.06 g, 0.799 fine silver, this specimen is 3,05 g.
Catalog reference: G.H. 52-1b; W. 541; Levinson II-82; V.H. 70. Roberts-8391.
- Levinson, Robert, The Early Dated Coins of Europe, 1234-1500: An Illustrated Catalogue and Guide to dated medieval coinage. Clifton, NJ: Coin & Currency Institute, 2007.
- Roberts, James N., The Silver Coins of Medieval France (476-1610 AD), S. Salem, NY: Attic Books, 1996.
- van Gelder, H. Enno, and Marcel Hoc, Les Monnaies des pays-Bas Bourguignons et Espagnols, 1434-1713, Amsterdam, J. Schulman, 1960, with supplement of 1964.
- [1]Elsen, Philippe, et al., Vente Publique 151: Collection Paul Witte, Monnaies de Brabant, Brussels: Jean Elsen et ses Fils S.A., 2022.
Link to:
- (1468-74) double patard
- (1478-81) florin d'or de Bourgogne, Antwerp mint
- 1483 double briquet
- (1485) demi-patard (demi-mecheleer), 2nd emission, Malines mint
- Flanders (1485) halve stuiver (halve mecheleer)
- (1485) patard (mecheleer)
- (1485) double patard (double mecheleer), Malines mint
- Flanders (1485) dubbele stuiver
- Brabant (1487-88) griffin
- 1487 double griffin
- Brabant 1488 1/2 noble Fr-39
- Brabant 1492 briquet
- 1492 double briquet
- Gelderland 1492 dubbel vuurijzer
- Coins and currency dated 1485