List of coin collectors

Coin cabinet with the royal arms of Louis XIV.

The first coin collector is said to have been Augustus. During the Renaissance, it became a fad among some members of the privileged classes, especially kings and queens.[1]

A coin collector is different from a numismatist, which is someone who studies coins. Many collectors are also numismatists, but some are not. Likewise, not all numismatists collect coins themselves.

CollectorDatesNotesReference
Caesar Augustus63 BC – 14 ADAccording to Suetonius, he gave "coins of every device, including old pieces of the kings and foreign money" as Saturnalia gifts.[2]
Pope Boniface VIII1230 – 1303[3]
Giovanni Mansionariodied 1337Collected Roman imperial coins[4]
Francesco Petrarch1304 – 1374Presented some of his Roman coins to Emperor Charles IV[4][5]
Francesco I da Carrara1325 – 1393Collected Roman imperial coins[4]
Jean, duc de Berry1340 – 1416Commissioned copies of the medals in his collection[6][7]
Alfonso V of Aragon1396 – 1458Had a collection of ancient coins which had been discovered in Italy; carried them with him in an ivory cabinet[8]
Leonello d'Este1407 – 1450Collected Greek and Roman coins[9]
Pope Paul II1417 – 1571Collected ancient coins, and had about a hundred gold and a thousand silver coins; "was able at a glance to tell where an ancient coin came from"[10][11]
Julius Pomponius Laetus1428 – 1498[10]
Matthias Corvinus1443 – 1490[8]
Lorenzo de' Medici1449 – 1492Purchased coins that had been in Pope Paul II's collection[11]
Maximilian I1459 – 1519[12]
Guillaume Budé1467 – 1540Wrote De Asse et Partibus Eius (1514) on Roman coins and measures[13]
Cuthbert Tunstall1474 – 1559[14]
Ferdinand I1503 – 1564Collected Roman coins[15]
Joachim II Hector, Elector of Brandenburg1505 – 1571Established the Berlin Coin Cabinet[16]
Catherine Parr1512 – 1548[14]
Andrew Perne1519 – 1589Bequeathed his collection to the Fitzwilliam Museum[17]
Alessandro Farnese1520 – 1589Owner of the Farnese collection[18]
Albert V, Duke of Bavaria1528 – 1579Collection is in the Bavarian State Coin Collection[19]
Ferdinand II, Archduke of Austria1529 – 1595The cabinets in which he stored his coins are today kept in the Vienna Coin Cabinet and at Ambras Castle[15]
Abraham Gorlaeus1549 – 1608His collection of 30,000 coins and medals was purchased by Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales[8]
Wenceslas Cobergher1560 – 1634Collected Roman coins[20]
Robert Cotton1571 – 1631Collection is in the British Museum[21]
Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales1594 – 1612Purchased Abraham Gorlaeus' collection[8]
Ernest I, Duke of Saxe-Gotha1601 – 1675[22]
John Greaves1602 – 1652Left his coins, "which he had collected in Italy and the East," to Sir John Marsham[23]
Louis XIV of France1638 – 1715Said to have instructed his ambassadors to look out for ancient coins.[24]
Jacob de Wilde1645 – 1721[25]
Frederick I, Duke of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg1646 – 1691His diaries reveal that he "enjoyed making an inventory of his coins and arranging them in order"[22]
Antoine Galland1646 – 1715Purchased ancient coins on his visits to the Middle East[26]
Anton Günther II, Count of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen-Arnstadt1653 – 1716Sold his collection to raise the money needed to become an Imperial Prince[22]
Thomas Herbert, 8th Earl of Pembroke1656 – 1733Collection auctioned in 1848 with 1500 lots[27]
Hans Sloane1660 – 1753Collection is in the British Museum[21]
Roger Gale1672 – 1744Bequeathed his collection to the Fitzwilliam Museum[17]
Richard Mead1653 – 1754Collection auctioned in 1755[28]
Frederick II, Duke of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg1676 – 1732Purchased collection of Anton Günther II, Count of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen-Arnstadt[22]
George II of Great Britain1683 – 1760Purchased Andrew Gifford's collection[29]
William Stukeley1687 – 1765[30]
Edward Harley, 2nd Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer1689 – 1741Collected Greek, Roman and English coins; collection auctioned in 1742[31]
Joseph Ames1689 – 1759[32]
Martin Folkes1690 – 1754Collection auctioned in 1756[33]
Thomas Martin of Palgrave1697 – 1771[34]
William Richardson1698 – 1775Collected British, Roman, and English coins[35]
Andrew Gifford1700 – 1784Collection purchased by George II[29]
Pieter Teyler van der Hulst1702 – 1778Collection formed the basis of the Coin and Medal Room of the Teylers Museum[36]
George North1707 – 1772Collected English coins[37]
Francis I1708 – 1765His collecting emphasized modern coins[15]
Louis Günther II, Prince of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt1708 – 1790[38]
Andrew Ducarel1713 – 1785Collection auctioned in 1785[39]
Charlotte Sophie of Aldenburg1715 – 1800Collected Greek and Roman coins[31]
Andrew Eliot1718 – 1778Collected New England silver coins[40]
William Hunter1718 – 1783Established the Hunter Coin Cabinet in the University of Glasgow[18]
Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham1730 – 1782Collected Roman imperial coins[41]
Oluf Gerhard Tychsen1734 – 1815Wrote Introductio in rem numariam muhammedanorum in 1794, the first scholarly manual of Islamic numismatics[42]
Pierre Eugene du Simitiere1737 – 1784Collection auctioned in 1785, making it the earliest known coin auction sale in the United States[43]
Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria1738 – 1789Inherited her love of numismatics from her father, Emperor Francis I[44]
George III of the United Kingdom1738 – 1820Contributed to the collection in the Hunter Coin Cabinet[18]
Johan Frans Podolyn1739 – 1784Collection of more than 6000 coins[45]
Thomas Jefferson1743 – 1826Acquired contemporary European issues through his travels abroad[46]
Sarah Sophia Banks1744 – 1818Collection shared between the British Museum and the Royal Mint Museum[47][48]
Kutsuki Masatsuna1750 – 1802Collection now in the British Museum and the Ashmolean Museum[49]
Jacob Georg Christian Adler1756 – 1834Collection is in the University of Rostock[42]
John Quincy Adams1767 – 1848Collection auctioned by the Massachusetts Historical Society in 1971[50]
Princess Augusta Sophia of the United Kingdom1768 – 1840Collected English and German coins[51]
George Robert Ainslie1776 – 1839Wrote Illustrations of the Anglo-French Coinage in 1830[52][53]
William Martin Leake1777 – 1860Collection purchased for £5,000 in 1864 by the Fitzwilliam Museum[17]
August Otto Rühle von Lilienstern1780 – 1847Collection is in the Oriental Coin Cabinet Jena[42]
John Doherty1785 – 1850[54]
Christian VIII of Denmark1786 – 1848Collection is in the National Museum of Denmark[55]
Joaquín Rubio y Muñoz1788 – 1874Collection is in the National Museum of Denmark and the National Archaeological Museum of Spain[56]
Caspar Reuvens1793 – 1835Collection is in the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden[57]
Claude Auguste Court1793 – 1880One of the first Europeans to become interested in the coins of South Asia[58]
Frédéric Soret1795 – 1865Collection is in the Oriental Coin Cabinet Jena and the Bavarian State Coin Collection[42]
John Gardner Wilkinson1797 – 1875Bequeathed his collection to Harrow School[59]
Heinrich Leberecht Fleischer1801 – 1888Collection is in the Deutsche Morgenländische Gesellschaft[42]
Pieter Otto van der Chijs1802 – 1867Director of the coin cabinet of the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden[57]
Louis Félicien de Saulcy1807 – 1880Collected Jewish coins obtained during his travels in Palestine; wrote Recherches sur la numismatique judaïque (1854), illustrated with coins from his collection[60]
Ernst Heinrich Meier1813 – 1866Collection purchased by the University of Tübingen[61]
Edward Clive Bayley1821 – 1884Collected Indian coins[62]
Hermann Weber1823 – 1918Collected Greek coins[63]
Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich of Russia1827 – 1892Collected Russian coins[64]
Byron Reed1829 – 1891Bequeathed his collection to the city of Omaha, where it resides in the Durham Museum[65]
Adriaan Justus Enschedé1829 – 1896Bequeathed his collection to the Teylers Museum[66]
Georg Bühler1837 – 1898Collection is in the Bode Museum[42]
Frank John Joseph1838 – 1895Reportedly had one of the finest private collections of coins and medals in North America, worth an estimated $30000 at his death[67]
José Gerson da Cunha1844 – 1900Collection included more than 27,000 pieces[68]
Prince Philipp of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha1844 – 1921Collection auctioned in 1928[69]
Gustave Schlumberger1844 – 1929Collected Crusader coins[70]
Samuel Mills Damon1845 – 1924Collection auctioned in 2006 for $3.9 million[71]
Robert Wallace McLachlan1845 – 1926The "Dean" of Canadian numismatics and VP of American Numismatic Association. Collection acquired by Chateau de Ramezay in Montreal and later most of it by Bank of Canada Museum[72]
Samuel Jean de Pozzi1846 – 1918Collection auctioned in 1921[73]
Gerald Ephraim Hart1849 – 1936Formed several outstanding collections of Canadian coins, tokens, medals, books and historical documents prior to 1900[74]
Francis W. Doughty1850 – 1917Collection auctioned in 1891 with 1539 lots[75]
Heinrich von Siebold1852 – 1908Collection is in the Oriental Coin Cabinet Jena[42]
Eduard Glaser1855 – 1908Collection is in the Bode Museum[42]
Ivan Ivanovich Tolstoy1858 – 1916Collection auctioned in 1913[76]
George Hubbard Clapp1858 – 1949Donated collection of 1543 large cents to the American Numismatic Society[77]
Milan Rešetar1860 – 1942Inherited and expanded his father's coin collection; wrote the two-volume Dubrovačka numizmatika[78]
Henry A. Greene1861 – 1950Collection of Greek coins purchased by the Rhode Island School of Design Museum in 1940[79]
Grand Duke George Mikhailovich of Russia1863 – 1919Portion of collection is in the Smithsonian Institution[64][76]
Ernest Robinson Ackerman1863 – 1931Collection auctioned in 1931[80]
Frederick Parkes Weber1863 – 1962Inherited an interest in coin collecting from his father, Sir Hermann Weber[81]
William A. Ashbrook1867 – 1940Majority of his collection stolen in 1919[82]
William H. Woodin1868 – 1934Collected pattern coins[83][84]
Edward Howland Robinson Green1868 – 1936Owned a Brasher Doubloon; at the time of his death, his collection was worth an estimated $5 million[85]
Edgar Adams1868 – 1940Editor of The Numismatist[86]
Victor Emmanuel III of Italy1869 – 1947Collection of over 100,000 coins is in the National Museum of Rome; also wrote a 20-volume Corpus Nummorum Italicorum, which catalogued each specimen in his collection.[87]
William Walter Coulthard Wilson1869 – 1924VP of American Numismatic Association, donated The Numismatist to A.N.A. and had one of the two finest collections of Canadian coins[88]
Farran Zerbe1871 – 1949President of the American Numismatic Association from 1908 to 1910.[89]
Enrico Caruso1873 – 1921Collection auctioned in 1923[90]
John Abner Snell1880 – 1936Collection of Chinese coins auctioned in 2011[91]
Eduard Kann 1880 – 1962 Austrian banker who went to work in China in 1901. Author of the first systematic catalog of Chinese coinage 'Illustrated catalog of Chinese coins (gold, silver, nickel and aluminium)' . Collection auctioned in 1970s and in 2000. [92][93]
Frank Stenton1880 – 1967Collection is at the University of Reading[94]
Herbert Ives1882 – 1953Served as President of the American Numismatic Society[95]
Arthur W. Hummel, Sr.1884 – 1975Passed collection of Chinese coins on to his son Arthur W. Hummel, Jr.[96]
Jerome Kern1885 – 1945Collection auctioned in 1950[97]
Adolphe Menjou1890 – 1963Collection auctioned in 1957[98]
Louis E. Eliasberg1896 – 1976Put together the only complete collection of United States coins ever assembled[99]
Robert L. Hendershott1898 – 2005[100]
Joseph Douglas Ferguson1901 – 1981First Canadian to be President of American Numismatic Association, Honorary President of C.N.A. and had the finest collection of Canadian tokens, coins and currency, purchased by Bank of Canada Museum in 1963 and medals at the Glenbow Museum[101]
Richard S. Yeoman1904 – 1988Wrote A Guide Book of United States Coins[102]
Oscar H. Dodson1905 – 1996Kept a collection of ancient Greek coins with him while serving on board the USS Hornet in 1942[103]
Keith Bullen1906 – 1976[104]
Buddy Ebsen1908 – 2003Owned a $4 Stella; co-founded the Beverly Hills Coin Club[105]
Philip Grierson1910 – 2006Bequeathed his collection of medieval coins to the Fitzwilliam Museum[106]
Arne E. Holm1911 – 2009Collection is in the NTNU Museum of Natural History and Archaeology[107]
Eric P. Newmanborn 1911Collection sold over five auctions in 2013–2014 for almost $55 million[108]

Peter Newton 1912-2010 American coin collector of over 20 coin books.

John Jay Pittman1913 – 1996President of A.N.A. 1971-73 and C.N.A., massive collection of high-quality US and World gold and silver coins sold by David Akers in auctions from 1997-99[109]
Farouk I of Egypt1920 – 1965Collection included a 1933 double eagle, and was sold by auction for a fraction of its real value in 1954 after Farouk's overthrow[24][110]
Arthur W. Hummel, Jr.1920 – 2001Inherited collection of Chinese coins from his father Arthur W. Hummel, Sr.[96]
Chris Schenkel1923 – 2005Collection auctioned in 1990 with 3404 lots[111]
Russell Rulau1926 – 2012Coined the term "exonumia"[112]
Nelson Bunker Hunt1926 – 2014Collected Greek and Roman coins; collection auctioned off in 1990 and 1991 as a result of his bankruptcy[113][114]
Jerome Remick1928 – 2005Edited The Guide Book and Catalogue of the British Commonwealth Coins; established the Royal Canadian Numismatic Association's Jerome H. Remick III Literary Award in 1995[115][116]
Harry W. Bass, Jr.1927 – 1998Collection resides in the American Numismatic Association Money Museum[117]
Kenneth Bressettborn 1928Collects Chinese and Japanese coins as well as ancient Greek silver coins[118]
David Gee1929 – 2013Collected Australian coins[119]
William Herbert Huntborn 1929Collected Byzantine coins; collection auctioned off in 1990 and 1991 as a result of his bankruptcy[113][114]
Jerry Buss1933 – 2013Owned a 1913 Liberty Head nickel and an 1804 dollar[120]
Q. David Bowersborn 1938Began collecting at age 13 and became a coin dealer at age 14[121][122]
Walter J. Husakborn 1942Collection of 301 large cents auctioned in 2008 for $10.7 million[123]
Gregg Binghamborn 1951Owned an extensive collection of commemorative half dollars and a complete collection of Morgan dollars[124][125]
Andre Dawsonborn 1954Collection auctioned in 1998 for over $6 million[126]
Paul Hollisborn 1972Began collecting at the age of six[127]

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