Hungary. Bela II.. Denar





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NGC-certified medieval Hungarian denar from the reign of Béla II (1131–1141), UNC Details with Environmental Damage, encapsulated under certification number 8396699-005.
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 compact, hand-struck issue from one of Central Europe’s historically significant royal monetary traditions. The coin is presented in a secure NGC holder with a castle-themed label and certification number 8396699-005.
The visible design shows a small medieval silver flan with a beaded outer border and a dense ornamental field. The central layout includes a cross-like structure with horizontal and vertical divisions, surrounded by compact curved devices, pellets, wedge-shaped elements, and abstract geometric motifs. The style is non-portrait and symbolic, consistent with early Hungarian denars where Christian-medieval imagery, linear decoration, and compact royal marks were used rather than later heraldic or figural compositions. The hand-struck fabric, tight flan, and sharp ornamental detail give the coin strong visual character within the early medieval Hungarian series.
Béla II, known historically as Béla the Blind, ruled during a period of dynastic consolidation under the Árpád dynasty. His reign followed the rule of Stephen II and forms part of the broader development of Hungarian royal authority in the first half of the 12th century. Coinage from this period reflects the kingdom’s position between the Holy Roman Empire, Byzantium, the Balkans, Eastern Europe, and the wider Latin Christian world. Denars of Béla II are therefore collected not only as Hungarian royal issues but also as artifacts of medieval Central European trade, administration, and state formation.
The NGC “UNC Details” designation indicates an uncirculated level of surviving detail, while the “Environmental Damage” notation identifies surface alteration that prevents a standard numeric grade. The coin shows muted silver-grey toning, darker recessed areas, and age-related surface texture, while the main devices remain well defined and visually legible. The certification and encapsulation make the piece particularly suitable for collectors seeking authenticated medieval material with clear attribution and protected presentation.
This curated certified Hungary denar is relevant to collectors of Béla II coinage, Árpád dynasty silver, 12th-century European coins, medieval Hungarian denars, Central European numismatics, NGC-certified world coins, hand-struck silver currency, early Christian kingdom coinage, royal Hungarian monetary history, and authenticated medieval issues from the Kingdom of Hungary. Its certified holder, visible medieval design, and connection to the reign of Béla II make it a collectible example of early 1100s Hungarian numismatic history.
Seller's Story
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 compact, hand-struck issue from one of Central Europe’s historically significant royal monetary traditions. The coin is presented in a secure NGC holder with a castle-themed label and certification number 8396699-005.
The visible design shows a small medieval silver flan with a beaded outer border and a dense ornamental field. The central layout includes a cross-like structure with horizontal and vertical divisions, surrounded by compact curved devices, pellets, wedge-shaped elements, and abstract geometric motifs. The style is non-portrait and symbolic, consistent with early Hungarian denars where Christian-medieval imagery, linear decoration, and compact royal marks were used rather than later heraldic or figural compositions. The hand-struck fabric, tight flan, and sharp ornamental detail give the coin strong visual character within the early medieval Hungarian series.
Béla II, known historically as Béla the Blind, ruled during a period of dynastic consolidation under the Árpád dynasty. His reign followed the rule of Stephen II and forms part of the broader development of Hungarian royal authority in the first half of the 12th century. Coinage from this period reflects the kingdom’s position between the Holy Roman Empire, Byzantium, the Balkans, Eastern Europe, and the wider Latin Christian world. Denars of Béla II are therefore collected not only as Hungarian royal issues but also as artifacts of medieval Central European trade, administration, and state formation.
The NGC “UNC Details” designation indicates an uncirculated level of surviving detail, while the “Environmental Damage” notation identifies surface alteration that prevents a standard numeric grade. The coin shows muted silver-grey toning, darker recessed areas, and age-related surface texture, while the main devices remain well defined and visually legible. The certification and encapsulation make the piece particularly suitable for collectors seeking authenticated medieval material with clear attribution and protected presentation.
This curated certified Hungary denar is relevant to collectors of Béla II coinage, Árpád dynasty silver, 12th-century European coins, medieval Hungarian denars, Central European numismatics, NGC-certified world coins, hand-struck silver currency, early Christian kingdom coinage, royal Hungarian monetary history, and authenticated medieval issues from the Kingdom of Hungary. Its certified holder, visible medieval design, and connection to the reign of Béla II make it a collectible example of early 1100s Hungarian numismatic history.

