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fjt_708986 - COUR DES MONNAIES DE PARIS Henri III - Émission au revers de Nicolas Le Camus 1586

COUR DES MONNAIES DE PARIS Henri III - Émission au revers de Nicolas Le Camus XF
120.00 €(Approx. 126.00$ | 99.60£)
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Type : Henri III - Émission au revers de Nicolas Le Camus
Date: 1586
Metal : brass
Diameter : 28 mm
Orientation dies : 6 h.
Weight : 5,75 g.
Edge : lisse
Rarity : R2
Catalogue references :
Predigree :
Exemplaire provenant de la Collection MARINECHE

Obverse


Obverse legend : CVRIA. MONETAR. FRANCIAE.
Obverse description : Écu de France couronné entouré du collier de l’ordre de Saint Michel.

Reverse


Reverse legend : FRAVS VIRTVTE PERIT ; À L'EXERGUE : 1586.
Reverse description : Lion égorgeant un loup.
Reverse translation : Le vice périt par la vertu.

Commentary


Ce revers est aussi celui du jeton de Nicolas Le Camus, Conseiller du Roy et Général en sa Cour des Monnaies, Feuardent 2251 et Corre 2809. On peut penser que les fonctions de contrôle étaient particulièrement importantes pour la Cour des Monnaies pour justifier un revers plus que violent où Nicolas le Camus est certainement le lion et le fraudeur le loup.

Historical background


COUR DES MONNAIES DE PARIS

(1552-1791)

In the Middle Ages, the Chamber of coins, located in the Palace, in the same premises as the Chamber of Accounts, was responsible for monitoring mints.. In 1522, Francis I gave it the powers of a real court to judge cases relating to counterfeit coin.. In 1552, Henry II erected this Chamber into a sovereign court, better known as the Cour des coins de Paris. The Court of coins of Paris had, in addition to its judicial powers, a political function (remonstrances, drafting of certain edicts. . . ) and control over weights and measures (it kept in particular the so-called "Charlemagne" pile). From 1704 to 1771 it gave up part of its jurisdiction in favor of the Cour des coins de Lyon. The Paris coin Court was abolished in 1791, during the Revolution. The Provost General of coins was a company responsible for policing coins and enforcing the judgments of the Cour des coins in the 17th and 18th centuries.. At its head, the provost general of the coins was an officer established to know the crimes of counterfeit coin and to instruct summarily the trials of counterfeit coin, the proceedings of which were then presented to the Court of the coins.

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