Cloth Seal, Colchester, William III, Alnage, Crown
Cloth Seal, Colchester, William III, Alnage, Crown, Image & Found by Chelsea McKibbin.
Found on Thames Foreshore, 16mm.
Blank // head of William III // crown / 3, .COLCHESTER: around // blank
A complete four-disc alnage seal for Colchester from the reign of William III.
William III is recognised by his hook nose, see p.35, in G. Egan, Alnage Seals and the National Coinage – Some parallels in Design, British Numismatic Journal 61, 1991, p.31-36, pl. 4-5, "After Mary's death, the head used for William, clearly identifiable on a large number of alnage seals from his hooked nose (pi. 5, 12C), continues the style used for the heads of Charles and James, with a depiction just about as close to the representations of these earlier monarchs as it was possible to get. There are two engraved lines at the nose on the head in pi. 5, 12D (very faint), and it is tempting to think that the administrators of the alnage, which around this time was coming under increasing criticism for its ineffectiveness as a means of quality control, sought to save money by having a matrix for Charles or James slightly altered, rather than commissioning the cutting of an entirely new one. There is no hint of alteration on the great majority of seals attributable because of the hooked nose to William, so some new matrices must have been cut during his reign. The continued use of what was, in origin, an early-Restoration portrait of Charles II, through many developments in style on coins, is symptomatic of the inertia in an organisation that had outlived its usefulness to all but the tiny number of beneficiaries from the subsidy, who treated the entire business as a source of personal revenue."
The 3 refers to the alnage subsidy paid on the cloth this seal was attached to.
See BSG.CS.00121 for a single disc from a four-disc Colchester alnage seal, again for the value of 3d. but with a portcullis instead of a crown.
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