NGC Grades Rare and Beautiful "Una and the Lion" Proof
Posted on 9/6/2017
Numismatic Guaranty Corporation® (NGC®) recently graded an example of the iconic 1839 Victoria gold “Una and the Lion” Five Pounds, which is widely considered to be the most beautiful British coin ever struck. The piece was submitted by Baldwin’s of St. James’s, an English firm, and was graded NGC PF 65 Ultra Cameo, making it one of the finest known of the type.
1839 Victoria gold “Una and the Lion” Five Pounds Click images to enlarge. |
The obverse of the 1839 “Una and the Lion” Five Pounds features a beautifully executed bust of Queen Victoria by chief engraver of the Royal Mint William Wyon, who also designed and sculpted the reverse. The legend VICTORIA D: G: BRITANNIARUM REGINA F: D: surrounds the bust, Latin for “Victoria by the Grace of God, Queen of the British territories, Defender of the Faith.”
The coin’s more famous reverse once again features Queen Victoria, but this time as Lady Una, a character from Edmund Spenser’s 1590 poem The Faerie Queene. She is seen directing a striding lion with a scepter in her outstretched right hand, and is clutching a globus cruciger (a cross-bearing orb) in her left. The Latin motto DIRIGE DEUS GRESSUS MEOS, which translates to “May the Lord direct my steps,” surrounds the iconic scene.
Only around 400 examples of the 1839 Victoria gold “Una and the Lion” Five Pounds were struck to commemorate the start of Queen Victoria’s reign two years earlier. The rarity of these coins combined with the undeniable beauty of the design makes these among the most desirable and valuable coins in all of numismatics.
This amazing piece of numismatic history highlights the Premier Coinex auction on September 22, 2017, in London by Baldwin’s of St. James’s. View the coin here.
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