Crown, 1662, by John Roettier, first laureate, draped bust right, rose below, both ties of laurel from lower curl, CAROLVS. II. DEI. GRA., weak stops, rev. inverted die axis, crowned cruciform shields, shields of England and france combined, pair of interlinked C's in each angle, Garter star at centre, date either side of crown, line between crown and shield on English and Scottish Arms, eleven strings to Irish harp, .MAG. BR.FRA. ET.HIB. REX. edge, .DECVS. ET. TVTAMEN*, inverted lettering (ESC 15; EMC 3; S.3350), proof like and attractively toned, well struck on a full flan, pleasing extremely fine, very rare in this condition
CHARLES II (1660-1685)
Crown, 1662, by John Roettier, first laureate, draped bust right, rose below, both ties of laurel from lower curl, CAROLVS. II. DEI. GRA., weak stops, rev. inverted die axis, crowned cruciform shields, shields of England and france combined, pair of interlinked C's in each angle, Garter star at centre, date either side of crown, line between crown and shield on English and Scottish Arms, eleven strings to Irish harp, .MAG. BR.FRA. ET.HIB. REX. edge, .DECVS. ET. TVTAMEN*, inverted lettering (ESC 15; EMC 3; S.3350), proof like and attractively toned, well struck on a full flan, pleasing extremely fine, very rare in this condition

Details
Crown, 1662, by John Roettier, first laureate, draped bust right, rose below, both ties of laurel from lower curl, CAROLVS. II. DEI. GRA., weak stops, rev. inverted die axis, crowned cruciform shields, shields of England and france combined, pair of interlinked C's in each angle, Garter star at centre, date either side of crown, line between crown and shield on English and Scottish Arms, eleven strings to Irish harp, .MAG. BR.FRA. ET.HIB. REX. edge, .DECVS. ET. TVTAMEN*, inverted lettering (ESC 15; EMC 3; S.3350), proof like and attractively toned, well struck on a full flan, pleasing extremely fine, very rare in this condition
Provenance
Spink auction 62, 19 November 1987, lot 307
Spink auction 125, 2 March 1998, lot 697

Lot Essay

This coin has many characteristics of a proof. The obverse die in particular has been very carefully prepared and polished. The flan is very full, the edges a little higher than normal and the teeth carefully cut. In fact the teeth actually protect the edge by projecting slightly. On the reverse the eleven harp strings are weak as is the crown over the Irish shield. All these characteristics are shared by the example in the Lingford sale, lot 281, which was described as 'struck like a proof', and by the example in the Inveruglas collection (Noble auction 48, lot 4461), which was described as a proof.
Of these coins Linecar and Stone state '...the dividing line between them and what may constitute a proof is often a matter of opinion; furthermore they command prices close to those realised by actual proofs.' In his recent pamphlet 'J Roettier, Patterns and Proofs of Charles II, Crowns, Notes', Roddy Richardson goes one stage further. 'There is a very good case for the so called "struck like a proof" pieces...I am of the opinion that these are in fact proofs and should be listed as such.'