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GREAT BRITAIN. Silver Electroplate Waterloo Medal, 1819 (1849). NEARLY MINT STATE.
137 mm. Eimer-1067; BHM-870. By Benedetto Pistrucci. Ordered by Great Britain's Prince Regent in 1819 to celebrate the defeat of Napoleon and to honor the four sovereigns involved in the victory. No wording on this magnificent medal, other than the artist's name in microscopic letters at 6 o'clock on the reverse.
The obverse features overlapping busts of Britain's Prince Regent (soon to be King George IV), Austria's Emperor Franz I, Russia's Tsar Alexander I and Prussia's King Wilhelm III, surrounded by a broad border of classical scenes with Apollo in a chariot at top.
Reverse: Victory rides with Wellington and General Blucher into battle, encircled by 19 bathing mermen-each representing one of the 19 years the struggle lasted. Jupiter in quadriga at top. Pistrucci spent thirty years perfecting the dies, and when he was finished, the Royal Mint was unwilling to risk hardening them-much less actually striking the medals.
In any event, most of those intended to receive the medals had died. Instead, the Royal Mint ordered twenty sets of electrotype shells and an additional unknown number of gutta percha castings.
Many of the electrotypes and castings were joined together to form two-sided medals, and others left uniface, as these. No struck medals were made until the 1960's when reduced size pieces were made in various metals. Both obverse and reverse have been cleaned though the obverse has toned nicely where as the reverse remains relatively tone free, mounted side by side within recesses in an 11 1/2 x 17 inch wood and velour frame.
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