Showing posts with label British coins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British coins. Show all posts

Coins of Great Britain 4 Pence Silver Coin of 1820, King George III.

British Coins Silver Four Pence penny Coin
England Fourpence coin
British Silver Four Pence Coin penny
 British Silver Four Pence Coin 
Great Britain Silver 4 Pence Coin of 1820.
The Groat or fourpence is the name of a long-defunct British silver coin worth four English pence.

Obverse: Laureated bust of George III right. Date (1820) below.
Legend: GEORGIUS III DEI GRATIA 1820

Reverse: Crown above large value numeral (4).
Legend: REX FID : DEF . BRITANIARUM

Reference: KM-671. R!
Diameter: 18 mm
Weight: 1.87 gram of Sterling Silver (.925)

Coins of Great Britain, Coins of the UK, British Sixpence, Coins of the United Kingdom, British coinage, British silver coins, Numismatic Collection, silver coins, old coins, coin collecting, rare coins, world coins, foreign coins, heritage coins, silver ira investment, silver bullion coins, silver coin collection investors, investment coins, antique coins, Unique Silver Coins, collectible coins.

Hong Kong Coins 10 Cents Silver Coin 1887, Crowned young bust of Queen Victoria.

Hong Kong Cents Coin Victoria
Queen Victoria - Hong Kong Silver 10 cents
Hong Kong Ten Cents coin
Ten cents Hong Kong coin
Hong Kong Coins 10 Cents Silver Coin, Queen Victoria, mint year 1887.

Obverse: Crowned young bust of Queen Victoria left.
Legend: VICTORIA QUEEN
Reverse: Chinese value within beaded circle.
Legend: HONG - KONG * TEN CENTS 1887 *

References: KM-6.3.
Mint Place: British Royal Mint (London)
Diameter: 18 mm
Weight: 2.7 gram of Silver (.800)


The First Hong Kong Coins.

As a result of the Treaty of Nanking, Hong Kong became a British Colony in 1841, but the Hong Kong's own coinage did not come into existence until 23 years later. Sir Hercules Robinson, the Fifth Governor of Hong Kong [1859-1865]. who declared that the commencement of Hongkong's own coinage on 16th February 1864. Though Royal Proclamation had already granted the use of the new coinage in Hong Kong on 9th January 1863.
Before Hong Kong had her own coinage, Hong Kong currency followed the British sterling system with an official gold standard. Although it was unworkable for the trading economy between Hong Kong and Mainland China at that time. Later, as the traders and settlers of Hong Kong were accustomed to the Chinese system of using weighed silver as money, Hong Kong monetary authority had to change its currency standard from gold to silver in order to secure a better trading relationship with the Chinese in Kwangtung Province. So that the using of Hong Kong daily currencies tended to similarity with Mainland China. Traders and settlers of Hong Kong used Spanish or Mexican eight Reales silver coins and Chinese silver bars or ingots for large amount of transactions and used Chinese copper cash, as well as the Indian or British low denomination silver, copper coins for the small payment.

The Official Exchange Rate:
1 Pound Sterling = 5 Mexican Dollars
1 Mexican Dollar = 2 and 1/4 Indian Rupees
1 Mexican Dollar = 1200 Copper cash

Coins of British India one Rupee Silver Coin of 1840, young bust of Queen Victoria.

British India Coinage Coins of Young Queen Victoria, Indian rupee silver coin
British India Coinage - Coins of Queen Victoria, Young Bust.
Indian coins collection one rupee silver coin
One Rupee coin issued by the East India Company, 1840.
British India coins, East India Company - one Rupee  Silver Coin of 1840, Young bust of Queen Victoria.


Obverse: Young bust of Queen Victoria left.
Legend: VICTORIA QUEEN

Reverse: Denomination (ONE RUPEE) within wreath. Small diamonds below inscription, 19 berries in wreath.
Legend: EAST INDIA COMPANY * 1840 *

Mint Place: Bombay
Reference: KM-457.8. (20 berries on wreath and small diamonds below Persian value)
Weight: 11.57 gram of Sterling Silver (.925); Diameter: 31 mm.

Coins of the British East India Company Half Rupee Silver Coin of 1840, Young bust of Queen Victoria.

British India coins Queen Victoria silver coin Indian half rupee
British India Coins - Young bust of Queen Victoria.
Indian half rupee silver coin Coins of India
Coinage of the British East India Company
Coins of the British East India Company Half Rupee Silver Coin of 1840, Young bust of Queen Victoria.
East India Company (also the East India Trading Company, English East India Company, and then the British East India Company)


Obverse: Young head of Queen Victoria left.
Legend: VICTORIA QUEEN

Reverse: Bi-lingual denomination (HALF RUPEE) within wreath.
Legend: EAST INDIA COMPANY * 1840 *

Reference: KM-456.1. R!
Mint Place: Bombay or Calcutta
Diameter: 24 mm; Weight: 5.77 gram of Sterling Silver (.925)

East India Company
The East India Company (EIC), originally chartered as the Governor and Company of Merchants of London trading into the East Indies, and more properly called the Honourable East India Company, was an English and later (from 1707) British joint-stock company formed for pursuing trade with the East Indies but which ended up trading mainly with the Indian subcontinent, North-West Frontier Province and Balochistan.
Commonly associated with trade in basic commodities, which included cotton, silk, indigo dye, salt, saltpetre, tea and opium, the Company received a Royal Charter from Queen Elizabeth in 1600, making it the oldest among several similarly formed European East India Companies. Shares of the company were owned by wealthy merchants and aristocrats. The government owned no shares and had only indirect control. The Company eventually came to rule large areas of India with its own private armies, exercising military power and assuming administrative functions. Company rule in India effectively began in 1757 after the Battle of Plassey and lasted until 1858 when, following the Indian Rebellion of 1857, the Government of India Act 1858 led to the British Crown assuming direct control of India in the era of the new British Raj.
The company was dissolved in 1874 as a result of the East India Stock Dividend Redemption Act passed one year earlier, as the Government of India Act had by then rendered it vestigial, powerless and obsolete. Its functions had been fully absorbed into the official government machinery of British India and its private presidency armies had been nationalised by the British Crown.

Coins of East India Company Silver rupee of the Bengal Presidency, 1835.

Indian coins Silver rupee East India Company Coinage
East India Company Coinage - Silver rupee
British India Coins of East India Company Silver rupee coin
Coins of East India Company Silver rupee
Coins of East India Company Silver rupee of the Bengal Presidency, 1835. Plain Edge
Coins of India, Indian Coins, The Coins of the Bengal Presidency. The Coinage of the Honourable East India Company.


Reverse: Persian legends in three lines. Regnal year 45 (fixed) and snowflake-designs in fields.
Obverse: Persian legends in three lines.

Mint Place: Calcutta
Mint Period: 1833-1835 AD
Weight: 11.64 gram of silver; Diameter: 26 mm

Bengal Presidency
The Bengal Presidency originally comprising east and west Bengal, was a colonial region of the British Empire in South-Asia and beyond it. It comprised areas which are now within Bangladesh, and the present day Indian States of West Bengal, Assam, Bihar, Meghalaya, Odisha and Tripura. Penang and Singapore were also considered to be administratively a part of the Presidency until they were incorporated into the Crown Colony of the Straits Settlements in 1867.
Calcutta was purchased by the English in 1698 and declared a Presidency Town of the East India Company in 1699, but the beginning of the Bengal Presidency as an administrative unit can be dated from the treaties of 1765 between the East India Company and the Mughal Emperor and Nawab of Oudh which placed Bengal, Meghalaya, Bihar and Odisha under the administration of the Company.
At its height, gradually added, were the annexed princely states of Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Punjab, Haryana, and Himachal Pradesh and portions of Chhatisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, and Maharashtra in present day India, as well as the provinces of North West Frontier and Punjab, both now in Pakistan, and most of Burma (present day Myanmar).
In 1874 Assam, including Sylhet, was severed from Bengal to form a Chief-Commissionership, and the Lushai Hills were added to that in 1898.
The Presidency of Bengal, unlike those of Madras and Bombay, eventually included all of the British possessions north of the Central Provinces (Madhya Pradesh), from the mouths of the Ganges and Brahmaputra to the Himalayas as well as the Punjab. In 1831, the North-Western Provinces were created, which were subsequently included with Oudh in the United Provinces (Uttar Pradesh). Just before the First World War the whole of Northern India was divided into the four lieutenant-governorships of the Punjab, the United Provinces, Bengal, Eastern Bengal and Assam, and the North-West Frontier Province under a Commissioner.
At its greatest extent, the presidency covered the major cities of Calcutta, Dacca, Chittagong, Rangoon, Penang, Singapore, Lahore, Delhi, Agra, Lucknow, Patna, Srinagar and Peshawar.

British coins Silver Penny Coin of King George III, 1786.

British coins Silver Penny Coin of King George III Coins of the UK
 British coins Silver Penny Coin of King George III 
Great Britain Coins Silver Penny Coin British coins
Great Britain Coins Silver Penny Coin
Great Britain Coins Silver Penny Coin of 1786, King George III.
Coins of the UK silver penny coins, Great Britain Coins, British coins, pictures of silver penny coins.


Obverse: Armored and draped bust of George III right.
Legend: GEORGIVS . III . DEI . GRATIA .

Reverse: Crown above large roman value numeral (I). Date split in legend above.
Legend: MAG . BRI . FR - ET . HIB . REX . 17-86 .

Reference: KM-594. R!
Diameter: 12 mm
Weight: 0.49 gram of sterling silver (.925)

George III of the United Kingdom
George III (George William Frederick; 4 June 1738 – 29 January 1820) was King of Great Britain and King of Ireland from 25 October 1760 until the union of these two countries on 1 January 1801, after which he was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland until his death. He was concurrently Duke and prince-elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg ("Hanover") in the Holy Roman Empire until his promotion to King of Hanover on 12 October 1814. He was the third British monarch of the House of Hanover, but unlike his two Hanoverian predecessors he was born in Britain, spoke English as his first language, and never visited Hanover.
His life and reign, which were longer than any other British monarch before him, were marked by a series of military conflicts involving his kingdoms, much of the rest of Europe, and places farther afield in Africa, the Americas and Asia. Early in his reign, Great Britain defeated France in the Seven Years' War, becoming the dominant European power in North America and India. However, many of its American colonies were soon lost in the American Revolutionary War. Further wars against revolutionary and Napoleonic France from 1793 concluded in the defeat of Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
In the later part of his life, George III suffered from recurrent, and eventually permanent, mental illness. Although it has since been suggested that he suffered from the blood disease porphyria, the cause of his illness was not then or now known for certain. After a final relapse in 1810, a regency was established, and George III's eldest son, George, Prince of Wales, ruled as Prince Regent. On George III's death, the Prince Regent succeeded his father as George IV.
Historical analysis of George III's life has gone through a "kaleidoscope of changing views" that have depended heavily on the prejudices of his biographers and the sources available to them. Until re-assessment occurred during the second half of the twentieth century, his reputation in the United States was one of a tyrant and in Britain he became "the scapegoat for the failure of imperialism".

English coins Silver Long-Cross Penny of King Henry III.

British English coins Silver Long-Cross Penny of King Henry III
English coins Silver Long-Cross Penny of King Henry III
British coins Long Cross Silver Penny English Coinage
Long-Cross Penny
English coins Silver Long-Cross Penny of King Henry III. (Class 5c) 
British and old English coins Silver Long-Cross Penny of King Henry III. Coins of the UK, Great Britain Coins, British coins, English Coinage, Long Cross Pennies.


Obverse: Crowned and bearded bust facing, with sceptre in kings left hand, splitting legend. More rounded face with oval shaped eyes.
Legend: HNRICVS REX III (King Henry the Third)

Reverse: Long-cross, splitting legend with four groups of triple pellets in fields.
Legend: IOH-ON-CAN-TER ("Iohan on Canterbury" = "Iohan/John of Canterbury")

Struck by Johan or John moneyer at the Canterbury mint. Mint Year: 1216-1272 (Class 5c: 1251-72)
Reference: S.1369. R!
Diameter: 18 mm; Weight: 1.29 gram of silver.

Henry III (1 October 1207 – 16 November 1272) was the son and successor of John of England as King of England, reigning for fifty-six years from 1216 to his death. His contemporaries knew him as Henry of Winchester. He was the first child king in England since the reign of Ethelred the Unready. England prospered during his century and his greatest monument is Westminster, which he made the seat of his government and where he expanded the abbey as a shrine to Edward the Confessor.

The Long Cross coinage (1247 - 1279 AD)

The long cross series was introduced under Henry III in order to prevent the coinage of the country being clipped and thus reduce the weight and value of the silver content of the coin.

The condition of the money circulating in England in the 1240s was probably as bad as it had ever been. The coins were all of the short cross type introduced more than sixty years beforehand, and the last general recoinage had taken place in 1205. Inevitably a high proportion of the coins were badly worn, but more significantly many were also clipped - an illegal practice performed by unscrupulous individuals, who would melt down the resulting slivers of metal and profit by selling the silver.

The seriousness of the situation is evidenced by the fact that it was the subject of discussion at a great council held at Oxford in 1246. The council deliberated on what measures should be taken, and considered a recoinage financed by debasement of the silver. The attraction of this proposition was that the public could be given back as many pence as they paid into the exchange, an approach repeatedly adopted by France in similar situations. In the event, however, when the decision was ultimately taken to proceed with a recoinage, the silver fineness was maintained. Debasement was rejected on the grounds that it would adversely affect trade, particularly with the Low Countries, where the English coin enjoyed a high reputation.

In order to thwart would-be clippers, it was decided that the new coins would carry a design in which the reverse cross would extend to the edge. If any of the four cross-ends were removed, the coin would be deemed illegal. In practice, however, the measure seems to have been largely ineffective, as many coins are found that fail to meet the legal requirement. In fact some of them seem to have left the mint in this condition, as a result of off-centred striking.

The recoinage itself was greatly facilitated by the king’s brother, Richard, Earl of Cornwall. In return for a half-share in the profits accruing from the project, Richard was prepared to make available his considerable holding of silver bullion to provide the initial stock of new coins. Accordingly, he was granted a licence, and by the end of July 1247 he had provided sufficient bullion to strike 1.6 million pennies.

The terms on which the recoinage was conducted, while lucrative for the king and his brother, were very onerous for the public. Anyone bringing their short cross coins to the exchange would receive only as many new pennies by weight as could be coined from those they deposited, regardless of face value. A further thirteen pence in every pound, over five percent, was charged for the expenses incurred in minting, which included a margin from which the earl and the king derived their profit. A chronicler of the time alleged that the man who brought in thirty shillings worth of old pence (360 pennies) got back little more than twenty shillings (240 pennies) in the new money.

Striking of the new coins began at London in November 1247, with Canterbury and the ecclesiastical mint of Bury St Edmunds participating very shortly afterwards. During the course of the next year, or thereabouts, they were joined by sixteen provincial mints, opened specifically for the duration of the recoinage. With a total of nineteen mints in operation, the recoinage was effectively completed during the period 1248-1250. There remained, of course, an ongoing need for new coin, but the level of demand for it could be met by the permanent mints alone, and the provincial establishments were closed at the end of the above period.

Long-cross Henry III pennies were minted at Bristol, Bury St Edmunds, Canterbury, Carlisle, Durham, Exeter, Gloucester, Hereford, Ilchester, Lincoln, London, Newcastle, Northampton, Norwich, Oxford, Shrewsbury, Wallingford, Wilton, Winchester, and York. These mints were closed in 1250 and the type modified to include the king holding a sceptre, only the London, Canterbury, Bury St. Edmunds and Durham mint remained open. Following Henry III death in 1272 the coinage continued to be struck in his name during the early years of Edward I reign. The long cross also made easier the task of cutting the coin into halves and quarters for change, thus producing halfpennies and farthings, as no round small change would appear until Edward I’s [1272-1307] reform in 1279.

Another feature of this series which has proved useful is the inclusion after the kings name of either TERCI or III, denoting that they belong to the reign of Henry III [1216- 1272]. Unfortunately for identification purposes this practice was not followed in subsequent reigns until Henry VII [1485-1509] included such an indication on his coins.

In 1257, a gold coin was struck to the value of 20 silver pennies. Known today as the 'Gold Penny' the issue was intended to mirror the adoption of gold coinage by Florence, France and Naples a few years earlier. Initially undervalued against silver the coinage this experiment proved unsuccessful. It was revalued at 24 silver pence in 1270, however the majority specimens must have been melted down. All the known examples (less than 10) are struck by the king's goldsmith Willem at the London mint.