The period following the death of King Henry I is known as
The Anarchy. Henry's only legitimate son and heir had been drowned in 1120 in the
White Ship disaster, so he had decided that he wished his daughter
Matilda to succeed him. When he died, Matilda, also known as the Empress Maud, was in
Normandy and her cousin
Stephen of Blois managed to get back to London before she did, and claimed the throne - with the support of many barons who were unprepared for the novel idea of a woman ruler. Matilda and Stephen set up rival courts in Bristol and London and proceeded to issue coins from the mints under their control while the political unrest continued for the better part of 20 years. Stephen won the political battle, but when his own son and heir, Eustace, died in 1153 he agreed that Matilda's son Henry would succeed him. Many of the coins produced during the Anarchy are of poor quality.
King Stephen's coins There are approximately 5 principal varieties of coins produced by Stephen's mints, normally containing the legend STIEFNE, STIEFNE R, STIEFNE RE, or STIEFNE REX, but one issue bears the legend PERERIC which cannot be translated but is thought to have been constructed by the moneyers to look like the previous reign's HENRICUS, so they could disassociate themselves from the conflict and hedge their bets about who would win, while still providing the required number of new coins. Stephen's coins were minted at Bedford,
Bramber, Bristol, Bury St Edmunds, Cambridge, Canterbury, Cardiff, Carlisle,
Castle Rising, Chester, Chichester, Cipen (possibly Ipswich), Colchester,
Corbridge, Derby, Dorchester, Dover, Durham,
Eden, Exeter, Gloucester, Hastings,
Hedon near Hull, Hereford, Huntingdon, Ipswich, Launceston, Leicester, Lewes, Lincoln, London,
Newcastle, Northampton, Norwich, Nottingham, Oxford, Pembroke, Peterborough, Pevensey,
Rye, Salisbury, Sandwich, Shaftesbury, Shrewsbury, Southampton, Southwark, Stafford, Steyning, Sudbury,
Swansea, Tamworth, Taunton, Thetford,
Tutbury, Wareham, Warwick, Watchet, Wilton, Winchester, Worcester, and York.
Empress Maud's coins Matilda's coins tend to show a cruder style than Stephen's regular issues. The obverse legend is MATILDIS IMP —
Empress Matilda, MATILDIS COMITISSA —
Countess Matilda, or simply MATILDIS —
Matilda. Matilda's coins were minted at Bristol, Cardiff, Gloucester, Oxford, and Wareham, and possibly also at
Calne and Canterbury. ==References==