Posted 1 year ago by Pewter World
Kings Shilling Pewter Tankard with Glass Base
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£47.99
£52.99
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Kings Shilling Pewter Tankard with Glass Base
1 pint pewter tankard
Made using lead free pewter products
Plain body
Square handle
Touch marked near rim towards handle
Room to engrave on the front face of the tankard
Polished finish inside and out
Comes with story card
A double glass base with a genuine shilling in between
Supplied in a simple gift box
Upgrade to either a silk lined or wooden box under Accessories
Height: 125mm
Base dia: 115mm
Weight approx: 400g
“Merry be you enjoying fine ale, but beware, in the darkness at the base of your tankard may be lying a shilling of the Monarch. Too late, and you feel the hand of the Sergeant’s men on your shoulder - accepted the Monarch’s Shilling you have - the bargain concluded!”
The glass bottom tankard was developed to combat this. A shilling could be clearly seen at the bottom of the tankard by the drinker who would then not take the drink avoiding being press ganged into enlistment. First mentioned around 1694 this practice continued until abolished in July 1870. However it continued to be referred to until the Mutiny Act 1878 where it was mentioned as enlistment money.
1 pint pewter tankard
Made using lead free pewter products
Plain body
Square handle
Touch marked near rim towards handle
Room to engrave on the front face of the tankard
Polished finish inside and out
Comes with story card
A double glass base with a genuine shilling in between
Supplied in a simple gift box
Upgrade to either a silk lined or wooden box under Accessories
Height: 125mm
Base dia: 115mm
Weight approx: 400g
“Merry be you enjoying fine ale, but beware, in the darkness at the base of your tankard may be lying a shilling of the Monarch. Too late, and you feel the hand of the Sergeant’s men on your shoulder - accepted the Monarch’s Shilling you have - the bargain concluded!”
The glass bottom tankard was developed to combat this. A shilling could be clearly seen at the bottom of the tankard by the drinker who would then not take the drink avoiding being press ganged into enlistment. First mentioned around 1694 this practice continued until abolished in July 1870. However it continued to be referred to until the Mutiny Act 1878 where it was mentioned as enlistment money.