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Charles II gold pierced Touchpiece, NGC VF20
Charles II (1660-85), pierced gold Touchpiece, 19mm, toothed outer border both sides, three masted ship in full sail left, smaller hatched rigging, legend surrounds CAR.II.D.G.M.B.FR. ET.HI.REX., rev. struck en medaille, St. Michael slaying dragon, SOLI DEO GLORIA no stops at gloria, weight 1.93g (MIi 477/86; Woolf Type B dies O4/R3-29/30 p.55; Noon 313-17). Toned, struck on a notably smaller sized module when compared with the other Gold Touchpieces of the reign, akin to the smaller James II Touchpieces, graded by NGC as VF20.
NGC Certification 4913159-012
The legends translate as "Charles the second by the grace of God, King of Great Britain, France and Ireland" on obverse and on the reverse "Glory to God alone."
The so called "Kings Evil" or Morbus Regius also known as the disease scrofula was what the Royal touch from the monarch was purported to be able to cure. Since the time of King Edward the Confessor (later canonised) a belief in prayer coupled with the Royal touch could incur a miraculous recovery and it became usual to give money as alms to the afflicted, in the Middle Ages a Penny as a day's wages for a labourer. Later in the medieval period the gold Angel coin became prominent as the "doctors" coin as the 6s and 8d face value was the standard fee of a medical doctor at the time. The reverse legend of Angel coins was revered as a healing inscription coupled with St. Michael slaying the devil as a dragon. As the monarch was seen to have a divine right to Kingship and was related to the now Sainted King, the coin became effectively a healing amulet especially if the monarch had once touched it. The passing of a Touch-Piece therefore became more commonplace under the Stuart reigns of James I and Charles I, and at these times of plague and other disease it was sensible for the King to pass such Angel coins, rather than to touch those physically ailed, a social distance being maintained by the gift of coin. The recipient who may have cured from their ill would covet such a coin and wear it against their skin probably for the rest of their life, and this is why such coins are often holed. By the time of the later Stuart reigns of Charles II and James II the Angel coin was no longer in production as machinery had become the new norm at the Mint. A need to still touch for the Kings evil meant production of these special pieces as we have for sale herewith prevailed and there was even a gap left in the legend where the piercing would occur. The reverse depicts the warship "The Sovereign of the Seas" launched in October 1637 and in service until it was burned by fire in Chatham docks in 1697.