. Hungary Bela II (1131-41). Denar ND

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Yevhen Fedoryshyn
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Estimate  € 150 - € 200
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Description from the seller

NGC-certified medieval Hungary denar from the reign of Béla II, King of Hungary from 1131–1141, encapsulated by Numismatic Guaranty Company with the attribution “Hungary Denar, Bela II” and the grade designation “UNC Details, Environmental Damage.” This curated 12th-century silver denar belongs to the early Árpád dynasty coinage of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary and represents a historically important issue from Central Europe during the first half of the 1100s. The coin is housed in a secure NGC holder with a castle-themed label, certification number 8396699-003, and the official NGC verification reference visible on the reverse of the slab.

The coin displays a compact medieval silver flan with strong surviving detail and distinctive hand-struck character. The primary side features a beaded or radiating outer border surrounding a symmetrical ornamental field divided by a central cross-like structure. Curved scroll-like devices appear in the quadrants, with pellet and linear details creating the abstract, highly stylized appearance associated with early Hungarian royal denars. The opposite side presents a circular composition with concentric rings, a small central cross or rosette-like device, and surrounding linear elements, all framed within the irregular medieval flan. The design language is typical of early Árpádian coinage, where symbolic ornamentation, Christian-influenced motifs, geometric devices, and compact silver fabric replaced portrait-style imagery.

Béla II, often known as Béla the Blind, ruled during a politically significant period in Hungarian history, following the reign of Stephen II and continuing the consolidation of royal authority under the Árpád dynasty. His coinage is closely connected to the monetary development of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary, a realm positioned between the Holy Roman Empire, Byzantium, the Balkans, Eastern Europe, and the wider Christian West. Denars of this type circulated in an era of expanding royal administration, regional trade, ecclesiastical influence, and Central European state formation, making them desirable for collectors of medieval European coins, Hungarian silver coinage, and early royal monetary systems.

The NGC grade designation “UNC Details” indicates an uncirculated level of remaining detail, while the “Environmental Damage” notation records surface alteration consistent with age, historical exposure, burial conditions, patination, deposits, or long-term environmental interaction. The visible surfaces show muted silver-grey toning, darker recessed areas, light granular texture, and age-related surface effects, while the main devices remain clear and visually defined. The combination of medieval fabric, certified attribution, and preserved design detail gives the piece strong appeal for specialized collections.

This curated coin is relevant to collectors seeking authenticated medieval Hungarian denars, Béla II coinage, Árpád dynasty silver, 12th-century European coins, medieval Central European numismatics, NGC-certified world coins, early Christian kingdom coinage, royal Hungarian monetary history, hand-struck silver denars, medieval trade currency, and historically attributed coins from the Kingdom of Hungary. Its certification, visible grade details, castle-themed NGC presentation, and clear connection to the reign of Béla II make it a notable example of 1100s Hungarian numismatic history.

Seller's Story

Just trying to make a buck

NGC-certified medieval Hungary denar from the reign of Béla II, King of Hungary from 1131–1141, encapsulated by Numismatic Guaranty Company with the attribution “Hungary Denar, Bela II” and the grade designation “UNC Details, Environmental Damage.” This curated 12th-century silver denar belongs to the early Árpád dynasty coinage of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary and represents a historically important issue from Central Europe during the first half of the 1100s. The coin is housed in a secure NGC holder with a castle-themed label, certification number 8396699-003, and the official NGC verification reference visible on the reverse of the slab.

The coin displays a compact medieval silver flan with strong surviving detail and distinctive hand-struck character. The primary side features a beaded or radiating outer border surrounding a symmetrical ornamental field divided by a central cross-like structure. Curved scroll-like devices appear in the quadrants, with pellet and linear details creating the abstract, highly stylized appearance associated with early Hungarian royal denars. The opposite side presents a circular composition with concentric rings, a small central cross or rosette-like device, and surrounding linear elements, all framed within the irregular medieval flan. The design language is typical of early Árpádian coinage, where symbolic ornamentation, Christian-influenced motifs, geometric devices, and compact silver fabric replaced portrait-style imagery.

Béla II, often known as Béla the Blind, ruled during a politically significant period in Hungarian history, following the reign of Stephen II and continuing the consolidation of royal authority under the Árpád dynasty. His coinage is closely connected to the monetary development of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary, a realm positioned between the Holy Roman Empire, Byzantium, the Balkans, Eastern Europe, and the wider Christian West. Denars of this type circulated in an era of expanding royal administration, regional trade, ecclesiastical influence, and Central European state formation, making them desirable for collectors of medieval European coins, Hungarian silver coinage, and early royal monetary systems.

The NGC grade designation “UNC Details” indicates an uncirculated level of remaining detail, while the “Environmental Damage” notation records surface alteration consistent with age, historical exposure, burial conditions, patination, deposits, or long-term environmental interaction. The visible surfaces show muted silver-grey toning, darker recessed areas, light granular texture, and age-related surface effects, while the main devices remain clear and visually defined. The combination of medieval fabric, certified attribution, and preserved design detail gives the piece strong appeal for specialized collections.

This curated coin is relevant to collectors seeking authenticated medieval Hungarian denars, Béla II coinage, Árpád dynasty silver, 12th-century European coins, medieval Central European numismatics, NGC-certified world coins, early Christian kingdom coinage, royal Hungarian monetary history, hand-struck silver denars, medieval trade currency, and historically attributed coins from the Kingdom of Hungary. Its certification, visible grade details, castle-themed NGC presentation, and clear connection to the reign of Béla II make it a notable example of 1100s Hungarian numismatic history.

Seller's Story

Just trying to make a buck

Details

Era
Before 1400
Culture/region
Hungary
Year/period and variation
ND
Ruler
Bela II (1131-41)
Denomination
Denar
Metal
AR
Condition
Graded by NGC
Certification number
8396699-003
Number of objects
1
Theme
History
The NetherlandsVerified
332
Objects sold
100%
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