The Coinages of the Channel Islands
Author of Contributions on The Coins and Tokens of Ceylon ( Numismatic Chronicle , Vol. XV. ); The XVIIth Century Tokens of Berkshire (Williamson's Edition of Boyne's XVIIth Century Tokens); Berkshire Dialect and Folk Lore, with Glossary (the Publications of the English Dialect Society), &c., &c., &c.
Before treating of the Channel Islands coinages in detail, it may be of interest briefly to notice in order the various changes and the influences which led to these.
That traces of the old Northmen, which were once obscure, have now become clear and patent; that institutions, long deemed Roman, may be Scandinavian; that in blood and language there are many more foreign elements than were originally recognized, are the results of much well-applied learning and acumen. But no approximation to the proportion that these foreign elements bear to the remainder has been obtained; neither has the analysis of them gone much beyond the discovery of those which are referred to Scandinavia. Of the tribes on the mainland, those which in the time of Cæsar and in the first four centuries of our era have the best claim to be considered as the remote ancestors of the early occupants of the islanders, are the Curiosilites, the Rhedones, the Osismii, the Lemovices, the Veneti, and the Unelli—all mentioned by Cæsar himself, as well as by writers who came after him. A little later appear the names of the Abrincatui and the Bajucasses. All these are referable to some part of either Normandy or Brittany, and all seem to have been populations allied to each other in habits and politics. They all belonged to the tract which bore the name of Armorica, a word which in the Keltic means the same as Pomerania in Sclavonic— i.e. , the country along the seaside.
All evidences that can be gathered would tend to prove that before the time of the Romans the Channel Islands were but thinly populated. There are no traces of decayed large towns nor records of pirate strongholds, and the conclusion is that the inhabitants were fishermen, and some living by hunting and crude tillage. The frequent Druidical remains show the religion which obtained. Any coins in use in those days would be Gaulish, of the types then circulated amongst the mainland tribes above named.
B. Lowsley
THE COINAGES
CHANNEL ISLANDS.
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL B. LOWSLEY,
GENERAL OBSERVATIONS ON COINAGES FOR THE CHANNEL ISLANDS.
THE EARLIEST COINS OF THE CHANNEL ISLANDS
ROMAN COINS IN THE CHANNEL ISLANDS
ON EARLY IMPORTED COINS AND THEIR VALUES.
THE COATS OF ARMS OF THE CHANNEL ISLANDS.
THE JERSEY SILVER TOKENS OF 1813.
COPPER AND BRONZE COINAGES OF JERSEY FROM 1841.
ON GUERNSEY COINS FROM THE MIDDLE AGES.
COPPER AND BRONZE COINAGE OF GUERNSEY FROM 1830.
SILVER COUNTERMARKED GUERNSEY CROWN.
CHANNEL ISLANDS COPPER TOKENS.
SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES.