Horndon mint
The Horndon mint was an
The only surviving example of a coin from the Horndon mint was among the hoard of coins found in the 18th century in a basement near
The moneyer, Dudinc, has the same name as someone striking coins in London for Harold Harefoot and Edward the Confessor. There is an "almost inescapable" conclusion that they were the same man.[3]
From the reign of
The existence of a mint at Horndon is described by Frank Stenton as signifying "a claim to be regarded as a borough"[6] and Horndon was noted as an Anglo-Saxon town by Aston and Bond[7] based on possession of a mint. A number of small mints were established during the reign of Edward the Confessor, but the choice of Horndon which was an "undistinguished village" is not obvious. Sydney suggests that the solution may be that the manor of Horndon was under the influence of Robert FitzWimarc and his son Swein of Essex, a powerful and ambitious local family.[3]
Notes
- ^ Metcalf, DM; Lean, W (1993). "The battle of Maldon and the Minting of Crux Pennies in Essex". In Cooper, Janet (ed.). The Battle of Maldon: Fiction and Fact. Hambledon Press. p. 223.
- ^ Metcalf, David Michael (1998). An atlas of Anglo-Saxon and Norman coin finds, c.973-1086. Royal Numismatic Society. p. 222.
- ^ a b c Sydney, John (July 1980). "The Horndon Mint". Coins and Medals Monthly.
- ^ Reaney, PH (1935). The Place-names of Essex. Cambridge University Press. p. 157.
- ^ "Anglo-Saxon coinage".
- ^ Stenton, Frank (2001). Anglo-Saxon England (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 536.
- ^ Aston, Mick; Bond, James (2000). The Landscape of Towns. Sutton Publishing. p. 59.