British Gold Sovereign
During the nineteenth century, the British gold sovereign coin
was the pride of the British Empire, the last coin to achieve significant
international stature before the era of paper money superseded metallic coinage.
Sir Charles Oman, an author on English coinage, praises the sovereign as “the
best piece ever produced from the English mint.” J. H. Clapman, author of a
well-known economic history of England in the late nineteenth century, wrote
that the sovereign had become “the chief coin of the world.”
The sovereigns were popular in foreign countries and many left England permanently. Sometimes fluctuations in exchange rates made it profitable to melt down sovereigns, and resell the gold bullion to the English mint, where it was recoined. One Treasury official, referring to the burden of keeping the world supplied with coins, observed that “although it is certainly no part of our duty to provide coins for foreign Governments, the facilities afforded to our commerce by the diffusion of a sound circulating medium throughout the world may justify a voluntary burden for that purpose” (Challis, 1992). Sovereigns were also struck in Sydney, Australia, and Bombay, India.
Britain continued to mint sovereigns until 1914, when gold coinage ceased to circulate domestically.
During the interwar period Britain returned to a gold bullion
standard, but gold coins were not minted. During the post–World War II era
sovereigns were minted intermittently and sold as a hedge against inflation, but
not as circulating currency.
The British pound sterling was the preeminent international currency during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, comparable to the United States dollar in the post–World War II era. The pound sterling, however, was the last international currency, the prestige of which was dependent on a precious metal coin of unquestioned weight and purity.
No comments:
Post a Comment