| GROATS | In numismatics, former English silver coins worth four old pence that were first minted under Edward I (6) |
| GROAT | English silver coin worth four old pence, first minted under King Edward I in 1279 (5) |
| ECU | Coin first minted under Louis IX |
| RESPLENDENCE | Brilliance of lender's pence that has been removed (12) |
| CROWNPRINCE | 25 pence that was cost to include name for principal heir |
| PEACEDOLLARS | US coins first minted in 1921, the last of their denomination to be struck in silver |
| NOBLE | Former English gold coin, first minted during Edward III's reign in the 14th Century (5) |
| COIN | In numismatics, currency in its metal form, produced in a mint (4) |
| COINS | Collected in numismatics. metal discs minted from flans which are seasonally emulated as foil-wrapped chocolates in a tradition derived from the legend of St Nicholas (5) |
| TESTON | An English silver coin worth a shilling and bearing the head of Henry VIII (6) |
| CRECY | First decisive battle of the Hundred Years' War, in which the English under Edward III defeated the French forces of Philip VI (1346) |
| FLAN | In numismatics, a blank disc or planchet from which a coin is struck and minted (4) |
| FLORIN | A former British silver coin first minted in 1849 (6) |
| TANNER | An alternative name for the old British coin, a sixpence, first minted in 1551 (6) |
| MINT | Type of facility that manufactures items studied in numismatics (4) |
| EFFIGY | In numismatics, a portrait of a person on the obverse side of a coin (6) |
| HARLECH | Welsh town in Gwynedd noted for its castle built under Edward I (7) |
| DUCAT | Coin first minted in Venice in 1284. (5) |
| UNUM | One in numismatics |
| LEGEND | In numismatics, the principal inscription on a coin or medal (6) |