British five pence coin

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Five pence (United Kingdom)
Value: 5.0 pence sterling
Mass: 3.25 g
Diameter: 18 mm
Thickness: 1.7 mm
Edge: Milled
Composition: 75% Cu, 25%Ni
Years of minting: 1990–present
Catalog number: -
Obverse
Obverse
Design: Queen Elizabeth II
Designer: Ian Rank-Broadley
Design date: 1997
Reverse
Reverse
Design: Segment of the Royal Shield
Designer: Matthew Dent
Design date: 2008

The British decimal five pence (5p) coin – often pronounced "five pee" – was first issued in 1968 in preparation for the 1971 decimalisation of the currency. At that time it had the same value, size and weight as the existing shilling, and it may be viewed as a continuation of the older coin. Between 1968 and 1971 it circulated, with a value of one shilling, alongside the pre-decimal shilling coins – the aim being to gradually familiarise the public with the new decimal coinage. After decimalisation the old shilling coin continued to circulate, with a value of 5p, until finally withdrawn in 1990.

The 5p coin is minted from an alloy of 75% copper and 25% nickel. The 1968 version of the coin weighed 5.65 grams (0.18 troy oz) and had a diameter of 23.59 millimetres (0.929 in). In 1990 a smaller version weighing 3.25 grams (0.104 troy oz) and with a diameter of 18.00 millimetres (0.709 in) was introduced. Apart from the reduction in size, the coin's design remained essentially unchanged. All the older 5p and shilling coins were withdrawn from circulation and demonetised from 1 January 1991. The old 5p coin had the same size as the 1 Deutsche Mark coin but was worth less than a fifth of a Deutsche Mark. Vending machines could not distinguish between the two, so the 5p coin was sometimes fraudulently used for the 1 DM coin.

Three different obverses have been used so far—from 1968 to 1984 the head of Queen Elizabeth II by Arnold Machin, from 1985 to 1997 the head by Raphael Maklouf, and since 1998 the head by Ian Rank-Broadley. In all cases, the inscription is ELIZABETH II D.G.REG.F.D. followed by the date.

According to the Royal Mint, 222,606 five pence coins were issued in 2004. As of December 2005 there were an estimated total 3,659 million 5p coins in circulation.[1]

Contents

[edit] Reverse designs

[edit] 1968–2008

1968–2008 reverse (coin shown is smaller size, introduced in 1990)
1968–2008 reverse (coin shown is smaller size, introduced in 1990)

The original reverse of the coin, designed by Christopher Ironside, is a crowned thistle (formally, The Badge of Scotland, a thistle royally crowned), with the numeral "5" below the thistle, and either NEW PENCE (19681981) or FIVE PENCE (1982–2008) above the thistle.

[edit] 2008–

2008 reverse
2008 reverse

In August 2005 the Royal Mint launched a competition to find new reverse designs for all circulating coins except the £2 coin.[2] The winner, announced in April 2008, was Matthew Dent, whose designs will appear on the British coinage from summer 2008.[3] The designs for the 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p and 50p coins depict sections of the Royal Shield that form the whole shield when placed together. The shield in its entirety is featured on the £1 coin. The 5p coin depicts the center of the Royal shield, showing the meeting point of the four quarters.

[edit] Mintages

  • 1968 ~ 98,868,250
  • 1969 ~ 120,270,000
  • 1970 ~ 225,948,525
  • 1971 ~ 81,783,475
  • 1972-1974 ~ none
  • 1975 ~ 141,539,000
  • 1976 ~ none
  • 1977 ~ 24,308,000
  • 1978 ~ 61,094,000
  • 1979 ~ 155,456,000
  • 1980 ~ 220,566,000
  • 1981-1986 ~ none
  • 1987 ~ 48,220,000
  • 1988 ~ 120,744,610
  • 1989 ~ 101,406,000

size reduced

  • 1990 ~ 1,634,976,005
  • 1991 ~ 724,979,000
  • 1992 ~ 453,173,500
  • 1993 ~ none
  • 1994 ~ 93,602,000
  • 1995 ~ 183,384,000
  • 1996 ~ 302,902,000
  • 1997 ~ 236,596,000
  • 1998 ~ 217,376,000
  • 1999 ~ 195,490,000
  • 2000 ~ 388,506,000
  • 2001 ~ 320,330,000
  • 2002 ~ 219,258,000
  • 2003 ~ 333,230,000
  • 2004 ~ 271,810,000
  • 2005 ~ 210,012,000

[edit] References

  1. ^ Estimated Coins in Circulation, Royal Mint
  2. ^ "Royal Mint seeks new coin designs", BBC News, 17 August 2005
  3. ^ "Royal Mint unveils new UK coins", 2 April 2008

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Shilling
Five Pence
1971–Present
Succeeded by
Current