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Gold sovereign information
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A Gold Sovereign is a gold coin first issued in 1489 for Henry
VII of England and still in production as of 2008.While the coin typically had a
nominal value of one pound sterling or 20 shillings, the sovereign was primarily
an official piece of bullion with no mark of value anywhere on the coin itself.
The name "sovereign" comes from the majestic and impressive size and portraiture
of the coin, the earliest of which showed the king facing, seated on a throne, while
the reverse shows the Royal coat of arms on a shield surrounded by a Tudor double
rose.
Information
Original sovereigns were 23 carat
(96%) gold and weighed 240 grains or one-half of a troy ounce (15.6 grams). Henry
VIII reduced the purity to 22 carats (92%), which eventually became and remains
the gold coin standard (so-called crown gold) in both England and the U.S.; the
weight of the sovereign was repeatedly lowered until when it was revived after the
Great Recoinage law of 1816, the gold content was fixed at the present 113 grains
(7.322 g), equivalent to 0.2354 Troy ounces [2].
In addition to the sovereign, the Royal Mint also struck 10 shilling coins (half
sovereigns), £2 coins (double sovereigns) and £5 coins (quintuple sovereigns).
Only the sovereign and the half sovereign were commonly struck for circulation.
Sovereigns were discontinued after 1604, being replaced by Unites, and later by
Laurels, and then guineas. Production of sovereigns restarted in 1817, their reverse
design being a portrayal of Saint George killing a dragon, engraved by Benedetto
Pistrucci. This same design is still in use on British gold sovereigns, although
other reverse designs have also been used during the reigns of William IV, Victoria,
George IV, and Elizabeth II.
In Victorian times it was the practice of the Bank of England to remove worn sovereigns
and half sovereigns from circulation and have them recoined. Consequently, although
a billion sovereigns have been minted in total, that figure includes gold that has
been coined and recoined a number of times. In addition, when coins were sent to
places such as the United States for international payments between governments,
coins were frequently melted down into gold bars because of the Federal regulations
then in force. When gold coins were finally withdrawn from circulation in 1933 in
the US, many thousands of British gold sovereigns were consigned to the metling
pot in this way.
It is estimated that in circulation, a sovereign could have a lifespan of up to
15 years before it fell below the "least current weight", that is, the
minimum amount of gold below which it ceased to be legal tender.[3] It was actually
the half-sovereign that had the most circulation in Victorian England. Many sovereigns
languished in bank vaults for most of their lives. It is estimated that only 1%
of all gold sovereigns that have ever been minted are still in collectable condition.
In 1891 a proclamation was made that members of the general public could hand in
any gold coins that were underweight and have them replaced by full weight coins.
Any gold coin struck before 1837 also ceased to be legal tender. This recycled gold
was subsequently reminted into 13,680,486 half sovereigns in 1892 and 10,846,741
sovereigns in 1900. (Both figures for the London branch of the Royal Mint).
Sovereign obverse (heads) dies were also used in the nineteenth century to create
farthings once they had become worn. (An obverse die could typically produce 100,000
coins.)
Sovereigns were produced in large quantities until World War I, at which time the
UK came off the gold standard. From then until 1932, sovereigns were produced only
at branch mints at Melbourne, Sydney, Perth, Bombay, Ottawa, and Pretoria (except
for some in 1925 produced in London as part of Winston Churchill's ill-fated attempt
to return the UK to the gold standard). The last regular issue was in 1932 (at Pretoria).
Production resumed in 1957, ostensibly to prevent the coin being counterfeited in
Syria and Italy.[4] Subsequent publication of treasury papers appear to indicate
that sovereigns were widely used in pursuance of British foreign policy in the Middle
East, and it was felt that the coin could not be allowed to fall into disrepute,
as many individuals were receiving payments in the form of sovereigns for services
rendered to the British government.
Sovereigns were produced most years as bullion until 1982. From there to 1999, proof
coinage only versions were produced, but since 2000, bullion sovereigns have been
minted. Modern sovereigns are minted at the Royal Mint in Pontyclun, Mid-Glamorgan,
Wales. The coins are produced in the precious metal unit which is sealed off from
the rest of the Mint, the Mint itself being protected by Ministry of Defence police.
Employees are not allowed to use any coins within the Mint; plastic tokens replacing
coins of the realm are used in the staff canteen.
Mintage figures for the latest British coin production are given below. Please note:
these are the actual number of coins issed, not the official issue limits often
advertised. In addition, the Mint will strike extra coins for the purposes of quality
control, i.e. samples of coins are submitted for the Trial of the Pyx which involves
their destruction. Thus, an issue limit figure never fully reveals the true number
actually created. Furthermore, the date on a bullion coin refers to the year the
die was made, not necessarily the year in which it was struck. It is not unknown
for the Mint to strike gold sovereigns with the date of the previous (or even older)
years, e.g. bullion sovereigns struck during the reign of George VI were all dated
1925 and featured the head of George V.
All information provided by wikipedia.org
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