ANA Money Museum to present “Una and the Lion” British Gold Coins through the Ages

January 18, 2002 By ekr

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ANA Money Museum to present “Una and the Lion” British Gold Coins through the Ages

A half millennium of British gold coinage will glitter in a spectacular exhibit at the American Numismatic Association (ANA) Money Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado, February 8 to April 26, 2002.

The exhibit – ” ‘Una and the Lion’ British Gold Coins through the Ages” – filling the lower galleries of the Money Museum at 818 North Cascade Avenue, will showcase a vast array of British gold coins dating from 1344; selected material never before allowed outside the Royal Mint; nearly 700 years of English coronation medals; and artifacts from the early days of Colorado Springs, once known as “Little London.”

“Beginning with the short-lived gold florins issued under King Edward III (1327-77), British gold coinage has held an allure and influence that continues today,” says Money Museum Curator Lawrence J. Lee. “The exhibit brings this legacy to life with displays of gold coins and medals, vintage photographs and related material.”

One of the many features of this brilliant exhibit will be a £5 piece known as “Una and the Lion” – considered one of the most beautiful English coins ever made. Issued at the beginning of Queen Victoria’s long reign, the 1839 gold piece depicts the 20-year-old monarch on the reverse (or tails side) as “Una” (Truth) – one of the principal characters in Edmund Spenser’s 16th-century allegorical poem The Faerie Queene – accompanied by a lion that guards her virtue.

“On the obverse (or heads side) of the gold coin is the ‘Young Head’ portrait of Queen Victoria, with her hair caught in a graceful bow in the back,” Lee says. “The young Queen Victoria engraving appeared on coins of the British Empire for nearly 30 years.”(Last August, the Royal Mint unveiled its 2001 Britannia gold bullion coin bearing an updated version of the Victoria £5 design, with the current portrait of Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse.)

Lee adds that, as part of this exhibit, the original dies used to strike the 1839 £5 gold piece will be on display. This will mark the first time the dies have been allowed outside the British Royal Mint.

The exhibit also will feature more than 100 historic English gold coins from the private collection of nationally recognized exhibitor Thos. H. Law. A partner with a Ft. Worth, Texas, legal firm, Law has been exhibiting his wide range of English gold coins for a decade, repeatedly being named “World Champion Numismatic Exhibitor” and winner of the ANA’s Howland Wood Memorial Award for Best-in-Show Exhibit.

Also included in the exhibit will be British gold coronation medals from the 1300s to the present from the collection of token and medal specialist and author David E. Schenkman

“From the time of the Stuart kings (1603) to the coronation of Queen Victoria (1837), gold and silver medals were scattered randomly to the onlooking crowd during the coronation ceremony as an expression of largess,” Lee says. “However, the crowds became more aggressive and the cost of this generosity grew. Not wishing to have the splendor and gravity of his coronation ruined in 1901, King Edward VII established the current tradition of presenting medals only to those who assisted in the coronation.”

Material from the Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum will highlight the city’s early days. Founded in 1871, the city attracted a great many British visitors and investors from the thousands of English tenant farmers and younger sons of large landowners who sought their fortunes in the American West. In the 1870s and ’80s, a Colorado Springs advertising campaign in British newspapers promoted the community as “Little London.” The moniker remains today.

The “Una and the Lion” Exhibit is set to open at the ANA Money Museum at 4 p.m. on Friday, February 8, with representatives of the British Royal Mint and Queen Elizabeth II in attendance. Tea and scones will be served, and, Lee says, “A splendid time is guaranteed for all.”

For more information about this or other Money Museum attractions, contact ANA Museum Services at 818 N. Cascade Ave., Colorado Springs, CO 80903-3279; telephone 719/632-2646; fax 719/634-4085; E-mail museum@money.org; or visit the ANA web site at www.money.org.

Originally Release Date: January 18, 2002
ANA Contacts: Phone: 719-482-9872
                            Email: pr@money.org
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