British Half Sovereign coin

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1915 half sovereign: reverse
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1915 half sovereign: reverse

The half sovereign was first introduced in 1544 under Henry VIII. It was a gold coin valued at ten shillings. After 1604, the issue of half sovereigns, along with sovereigns, was discontinued until 1817 following a major revision of British coinage. Production continued until 1926 and, apart from special issues for coronation years, was not restarted until 1980. It was also used extensively in the British colonies, such as Australia, until 1933.

Modern half sovereigns, from 1817 onwards, have a diameter of 19.30 mm, a weight of 3.99 g, are made of 22 carat (91.666%) gold alloy, and contain 0.1177 troy ounces (3.7 g) of gold. The reverse side, featuring St. George slaying a dragon, was designed by Benedetto Pistrucci, whose initials appear to the right of the date.

[edit] See also

Preceded by:
Unknown
Half Pound
1544–1926
Succeeded by:
Ten shilling note
British coinage
Current
One Penny | Two Pence | Five Pence | Ten Pence | Twenty Pence
Fifty Pence | One Pound | Two Pounds
Commemorative
Twenty-Five Pence | Five Pounds
Withdrawn (decimal)
Half Penny
Withdrawn (pre-decimal)
Farthing | Halfpenny | Penny | Threepence | Sixpence
One Shilling | Two Shillings | Half Crown | Crown | Half Sovereign | Sovereign