1650 Battle of Dunbar Military Reward 35mm silver medal MI 391/92 E181a2 EF
1650 Battle of Dunbar Military Reward 35mm silver medal MI 391/92 E181a2 EF
Obverse: Bust of Cromwell, hair long, in plain falling collar, armour, and scarf festooned upon the breast; in the distance, a battle scene.
Reverse: Parliament seated in one house with the Speaker.
By Thomas Simon.
An 18th century cast version.
The Battle of Dunbar was an emphatic victory for Cromwell and his forces against a Scottish army that supported Charles II’s attempt to win back his late fathers throne. Dunbar was followed a year later by similar success for Parliamentarians at the Battle of Worcester which ended the English Civil War. Thomas Simon was the Chief Graver to the Mint during the Commonwealth. Simon was asked to go to Edinburgh not long after the Battle of Dunbar to capture Cromwell’s portrait and begin work on the medal, the hasty production of the medal suggests how important his medallic art was to the promotion of the Commonwealth.
Silver.
35mm*28mm