1913 Great Britain Gold Sovereign Coins
Original price was: $880.00.$790.00Current price is: $790.00.
- Product ID:957454
- Year:Random
- Grade:Average Circulated
- Grade Service:None
- Denomination:1 Sovereign
- Mint Mark:Not Shown
- Metal Content:0.2354 troy oz
- Purity:.9167
- Thickness:1.52 mm
- Diameter:22.05 mm
- Outer Pack:40
Description
Great Britain Gold Sovereign Coins
Product Details
The British Gold sovereign has long been an attractive coin, ideal for the Gold bullion investor. The Gold Sovereign has been minted since 1817. These coins have worldwide popularity and recognition, making them a great way to diversify your portfolio and start buying now form Alphaoreminers.
Coin Highlights:
- Contains .2354 oz actual Gold weight.
- Multiples of 40 are packaged in tubes. Lesser quantities will be in protective packaging. Dates are of our choosing and determined by stock on hand.
- All coins will be in Average Circulated condition or better.
- Obverse: Depicts a bust of the reigning monarch at the time the coin was struck.
- Reverse: A rendition of St. George mounted on horseback slaying a dragon, designed by Benedetto Pistrucci.
- Minted at The Royal Mint and other commonwealth mints.
Great Britain Gold Sovereign Coins
Containing .2354 oz of Gold and featuring iconic designs, it is easy to see why British Gold sovereign coins are among the most popular British Gold coins in the world. Add these historic coin to your cart today!
British Gold Sovereign Coin
Gold sovereigns can be appealing coins for bullion investors and collectors for their prominent historical use as circulated currency within the British Empire and as an excellent store of value. The name stems from the English Gold sovereign, which predated it by more than two centuries. The new sovereign was conceived as part of the Great Recoinage of 1816 to help stabilize the British economy following the upheaval due to military and economic wars with the various regimes of a turbulent France. The sovereign coins were to replace the Gold guinea and were worth 20 shillings.
Italian sculptor Benedetto Pistrucci was commissioned by William Wellesley Pole, master of The Royal Mint, to design this new coin. Pistrucci’s St. George and the Dragon has been on each sovereign coin’s reverse side ever since. The obverse features the reigning monarch at the time of minting. Tradition holds that the direction a monarch faces is always opposite of the monarch that came before. At increments smaller than a full ounce, British Gold sovereign coins can be a more affordable way to begin building your Gold investment portfolio.
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