Cloth Seal, Augsburg, Image & Found by Coreserver.
Found in Cambridgeshire.
Two disc German cloth seal showing the letter A with a pellet in its upper section and annulets above, below and to the sides (with the help of similar seals) and on the other side a stylised pine cone.
See Nos.308 - 310 Fig.41, Geoff Egan, 'Lead cloth seals and related items in the B.M. (B.M. Occasional Paper 93)' "Seals from the fustians (mixed linen-warp and cotton-weft fabrics) of Augsburg, known to contemporaries in this country as 'Ousbrow or Augusta fustians', are among the most common and widespread of all the recorded imports in England, constituting almost one third of the Continental seals found here. They have been found in over a dozen counties ... and they are also known in large numbers abroad.... The pine-cone on the stamps is the heraldic badge of the city and the letter A is its initial. A large number of different stamps are known, most with the same basic devices on ... Sixteenth-/early seventeenth-century dating seems appropriate for these."
It is my conjecture that the v shaped bar in the letter A follows the medieval norm of v representing u and thus combining the first two letters of Augsburg in a simple ligature.