Bangkok Post

Collector pays £1m for rare coin

-

LONDON: A rare 1937 Edward VIII sovereign coin has been bought by a private collector for £1 million ($1.31 million), making it the most expensive British coin ever.

The coin was one of six prepared by the Royal Mint when Edward became king in 1936 and was due to be mass produced for general circulatio­n from Jan 1 1937.

But he abdicated in December 1936 — quitting his job as king — to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson, meaning that production was cancelled and coinage with his face on never entered circulatio­n.

Edward VIII insisted that the portrait show his left side, which he preferred, breaking the tradition of each new monarch facing the opposite direction to their predecesso­r.

He wanted to show his parting to break up an otherwise solid fringe of hair, the Royal Mint said.

The coin is a sovereign: a type of gold coin with a face value of one pound.

It is no longer in circulatio­n but is still accepted as legal tender in Britain.

Made from 22-carat gold, the coin is slightly smaller and lighter than a modern pound coin, measuring 22 millimetre­s in diameter and weighing 7.98 grams.

“The Edward VIII sovereign is one of the rarest and most collectabl­e coins in the world, so it’s no surprise that it has set a new record for British coinage,” said Rebecca Morgan, head of collector services for the 1,100-year-old

Royal Mint.

Of the six originally struck, four are in museums and institutio­ns and two are privately owned.

Their existence was not widely known until 1970, as they were locked away and not treated as part of the Royal Mint museum’s collection, because of the sensitivit­y of Edward’s abdication.

The Royal Mint sourced this particular coin from a collector in the United States to bring it back to Britain for the new buyer.

 ?? THE ROYAL MINT/VIA REUTERS ?? A rare Edward VIII sovereign coin is pictured at the Royal Mint in Llantrisan­t, Wales.
THE ROYAL MINT/VIA REUTERS A rare Edward VIII sovereign coin is pictured at the Royal Mint in Llantrisan­t, Wales.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand