Holograph notes on possible subjects and mottoes for George I's Coronation medal
If {illeg} Astyages did nothing glorious. Of all the kings of the Medes Cyaxeres was the greatest warrior Herodotus tells us that he was much more warlike then his ancestors & that he was the first who reduced the irregular & undisciplined forces of the Medes into discipline & therefore by the testimony of Herodotus he was that king of the Medes of whom Æschylus writes makes the first conqueror & founder of the Empire {illeg} saying {illeg} He that first le{illeg}d the army was a Mede. {illeg} Darius according to Daniel was the son of Achsuerus of yt seed of The next the Medes, that is the son of Cyaxeres of the seed royal. He reigned by the laws of the Medes & Persians (Dan 0.8, 12, 15 & 8.20) & therefore he reigned over the Medes & Persians as well as over Babylon, & the Medes being set first were uppermost in his reign, as the for in the reign of Cyrusafterwards when ye Persians were uppermost they were set before the Medes Dan Esther 1.3, 14, 18, 19. You may know also by the number of provinces in ye kingdom of Darius that he re was king of the Medes & Persians For upon the conquest of Babylon he set over the whole kingdom 120 Princes & afterwards when the Provinces of Egypt Thebais & Lyybyica were added to ye kingdomby Cambyses the whole continued but 127 Provinces Esther 1. {illeg}{illeg}. So then its ce Cyaxeres, Darius & Cyrus were the three first kings mentioned by Æschylus the oldest greek author who writes of these things. Herodotus has incerted the order of the kings Astyages & Cyaxeres, putting Cyaxer Astyages after Cyaxeres Xenophon has restored the right order & Daniel has insertedadded Darius whom the Greeks reigned be who reigned {illeg} worst {illeg} or Cyaxares & Cyruswho after them both, a man of the same age wth Cyrus the grandson of Astyages.
{illeg} Astyages did nothing glorious. It was In his reig the Scy a great body of Scytheians commanded by Madyes
– – – – Darius into a very great Monarchy. This Monarchy rose up by the fall of Nineveh & about 69 or 70 years after by the fall of Babylon grew to its full greatness excepting that Cambyses enlarged it into Egypt.
The great slaughters wch Cyaxeres made of the nations in erecting thisis Empire of the Medes
– – – – – wch was about 70 years.
It is to be conceived therefore – – – befor {sic} Cy{illeg}rus as above.
When Cyrus had conquered Babylon – – – committed a mistake in the time & name of the king.
King Iames 1sye 1st in tokento signify that he would unite the two kingdoms of England & Scotland stiled himself Magna Britanniæ Rex & on the Reverse of his broad pieces & xxs pieces stiled put this Motto Faciam eos in Gentem unam, I will make them one nation Ezek 37. 22. In reference to this inscription & thereby to signify that her Majty has finished a great & difficult work ofan undertaking of an 10{illeg}0 years standing I propose the following Medal.
On the first side her Maties effigies wth the inscription ANNA. D. G. MAG. BRITANNIÆ. REGINA, or ANNA. D. G. MAGNÆ. BRITANNIÆ. F. et. H. REGINA. On the second her Maty in royal apparel, in the posture of Britannia sitting on a Globe in Royal apparel wth a speare in her hand & a shield by her side to represent Britanniaboth her self wch {illeg}& her mystical body BRITannia. {sic}. The sheild to beto be charged wth the new arms of great Britain, In her left hand a Rose & a Thistle grows upon one stalk; the Rose towards her right hand. And In the prospect below two revers (Theamesis & Boderia) unite into one common stream oOver her head two hands to signify that this is the work of heaven comeing out of ye the Heavenclouds holding a single crown to crown her, {illeg} {illeg} her wthsignifyingto signify that this is the work of heaven. And in the prospect below two rivers (the Tames & Forth (T amesis & Boderia).)unit The motto, FECI. EOS. IN. GENTUM. UNAM. And in the Exergue I. MAII. Mieng into one common stream.{illeg}DCVII. /In this designe the union is represented by the single crowns in two hands by the Rose & Thistle upon one stalk, by the new arms of great Britain upon the shield, & by the two Rivers Thamesis & Boderia Forth uniting: for rivers were anciently the emblemes of Kingdom. By The Motto, the union is refered wch also expresses the union{illeg}to the union to ye Queen as God the minister {illeg}of heaven in this work, & although this motto yet may at first seem flat, but being compared wth that on the gold coynes of K Iames I, & wth the Prophesy of Ezekiel it will appear very significant grave & {illeg} compr comprehensive, pious lively, pious & majestick, & perhaps the most apposite of any that can be thought of. A poetical Motto is too lightnot so grave for such an occasion.
Tw{illeg}o weoman hand in hand to represent England & Scotland uni{illeg}tesd,. sum to representsignify only a {illeg}federal union, or only such an union ans is represent by the Motto on the money of K. Charles I, Floreal concordia regna. After3 thise union4, England1 & Scotland2 should be rem{illeg}embered no more, & therefore in thies Medal they should be only glanced at & nat made too conspicuous. However for variety I have caused towo or two draughts of this kind of weoman to be made together wth sometwo others draughts on the next pages, but prefer that above. The Draughts were made in hast & when the designe in general is resolved upon the Graver will be more exact.
How Cyrus dethroned Dariushis predecesoor Herodotus tells at large excepting that he errs in the name of the king. Cyaxeres according to Herodotus reigned 40 years & his successor 35 & therefore Astyages the grandfather of Cyrus & father of Cyaxeres was dead 75 years before the reign of Cyrus that is about 4 or 5 years before the taking of Nineveh.
How Cyrus after he had dethroned his predecessor made war upon Crasus & ca
As the Mag Zoroaster In the sacred commentary of ye Persian rites, is said to have these words are ascribed to Zoroaster: Deus est accipitris capite. Hei est primus – – inventor But as mankind is naturally prone to folly & superstition & the ancient Egyptians, Syrians & Chaldæans declined from the workshop of the in{illeg} omnipresent invisible Gold whom {illeg}o eye hath seen nor can see to worship finite corporeal{illeg} visible{illeg} subsances {sic}, so ye d{illeg} Persians in a short time declined from the incorruptible {illeg} ordeal unbegotten indivisible Goldre{illeg} of ye {illeg} to worship the sun & the fire & at length to worship dead men & images.
{illeg} As the Priests of the Persians were called Mage TheMagicians to the knowledge of the{illeg} Persian religion, was called the Magie{illeg}skill of the Priests in divinations by dreams, extraordinary events & in interpreting drea in the interpretations of dreams & other& exercise of the Priesthood their sacred hymn{illeg}s, {illeg} invocations & ceremonies used by the Priests in their worship & their skill in divinations were {illeg}called Magica Magic; & & so all so all {sic} superstition in al religions is of the same nature with Magic & deserves to be called by that name.so all superstition is Magic, in this {illeg} [& all pretending to supernatural operations by ceremonies is]
Source
MINT 19/5/31, National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, UKAugust or September 1714, c. 1,263 words.
is version of
- Holograph notes on possible subjects and mottoes for George I's Coronation medal [MINT02069]
- Holograph notes on possible subjects and mottoes for George I's Coronation medal [MINT02070]
- Holograph notes on possible subjects and mottoes for George I's Coronation medal [MINT02071]
- Holograph notes on possible subjects and mottoes for George I's Coronation medal [MINT02072]
- Holograph notes on possible subjects and mottoes for George I's Coronation medal [MINT00759]