NOW ACCEPTING INSTALLMENTS WITH SHOP PAY

Cupid Love Token

Cupid Love Token

Regular price $2,750.00 Sale

The letters in St Valentine so vastly will amount,
Postmen may judge then by the lot, they won’t have time to count;
They must bring round spades and measures, to poor love sick souls
Deliver then by the bushels, the same as they do coals

Valentine’s Day cards gained popularity in the Victorian Era due to advances in printing technology coupled with the introduction of the penny post (referenced in the poem above). The affordability of the cards and the postage increased the number of cards sent from 60,000 in 1835 to over 400,000 in 1840. For one particular lover and beloved, a card was not enough, and this sweet little love token was borne. This “Cupid” love token is engraved on a British Victoria young head three pence minted in 1885.

This love token is  approximately 17mm in diameter and is set in a 14k YG and diamond bezel with 4 rubies and an openable bale.

This love token is Ready to Ship!

---

Love tokens are antique coins that were planed down on one or both sides and embellished with names, personal messages, images and bon mots.

The exact origin of this practice is up for debate: some numismatists trace the history back to 13th century England and the practice of bending coins. When asking a favorite saint for a favor, coins were bent and pledges were made as a physical token of the pledge made. The practice of engraving coins took off during the late 1600’s through the 1800’s, when coins were engraved with everything from primitive to highly skilled techniques in equal measure.

Typically, the minted words and images were removed from the obverse side of the coin - the front of the coin, or what we call heads when we flip a coin as they are commonly decorated with the bust of a prominent person. In some cases the reverse of the coin was used as the blank canvas for the embellishment, which is why you may see a love token of the same year with a different backside. While both sides of the coin are interesting, using the reverse side makes it difficult to determine the year in which the coins were minted.

Love tokens were executed on practically all denominations of coins in many countries. According to the US Mint, the love token phenomenon caused a shortage of dimes during the peak of the craze. Dimes were not a huge amount of money to throw away, thus their popularity. When other coins were used, the choice of coin communicated social and economic status: gold coins and larger denominations of silver coins were a sign of the givers’ wealth, whereas nickels and pennies were seldom used as they were considered common due to their composition – nickel and copper versus silver or gold.