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v11_1271 - RUSSIA - PETER THE GREAT I Rouble 1721 Moscou

RUSSIA - PETER THE GREAT I Rouble 1721 Moscou XF
MONNAIES 11 (2002)
Starting price : 182.94 €
Estimate : 335.39 €
Realised price : 207.33 €
Number of bids : 2
Maximum bid : 230.35 €
Type : Rouble
Date: 1721
Mint name / Town : Moscou
Quantity minted : 763995
Metal : silver
Millesimal fineness : 854 ‰
Diameter : 40 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Weight : 27,42 g.
Edge : inscrite en relief (Décret rouble de l’atelier de Moscou, 1721)
Rarity : R1
Coments on the condition:
Ce rouble est sur un flan assez large et légèrement voilé. Le coin de droit qui a frappé cette monnaie présentait une fracture à 11 heures, derrière la tête de Pierre Ier. On doit noter un soulèvement de métal au niveau de la tête
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : LÉGENDE CYRILLIQUE.
Obverse description : Buste lauré, drapé et cuirassé de Pierre Ier à droite vu de trois quarts en avant.
Obverse translation : (Pierre, empereur autocrate de toutes les Russies).

Reverse


Reverse legend : LÉGENDE CYRILLIQUE.
Reverse description : Aigle bicéphale surmontée de trois couronnes impériales, celle du milieu étant plus grande. Dans les serres de droite le sceptre, dans celles de gauche un globe crucigère.
Reverse translation : (Monnaie nouvelle valeur rouble / 1721).

Historical background


RUSSIA - PETER THE GREAT I

(7/05/1682-8/02/1725)

Peter I (9/06/1672-8/02/1725) is the son of Alexis I (1645-1676) and succeeded his brother Fedor III (1676-1682). He acceded to the throne under the regency of his half-sister, Sophia, and his half-brother, Ivan V.. He reigned from 1689 and became Tsar of Russia on the death of his half-brother.. In 1698, he crushed the revolt of the imperial guard, the Streltsi, and Sophie was relegated to a convent where she died.. He completely reformed Russia from 1700 and traveled several times in Europe (United Provinces, England, France). Autocrat, reformer of morals and traditional life, he nevertheless had his first wife walled up and his son Alexis tortured to death (1718). He married a former cantinière, Catherine Ire. In foreign policy, he was the implacable enemy of Charles XII of Sweden (1697-1712) whom he defeated at Poltava in 1709. At the Treaty of Nystadt he seized the mainland Swedish possessions. He was less happy with the Turks and had to return Azov to them which he had taken from them.. He founded a new capital open to the Baltic and the world, Saint Petersburg, in 1703. He created the Russian war and trade fleet. He died in 1725.

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