|
Home Investing in Sovereigns The Sovereign Sovereigns on Ebay How to Sell Gold Fixing the Gold Price Methods of Investing Gold Standard Silver Standard Precious Metals Collecting Coins Coin Terms Half Sovereigns Gold Coins Silver Coins Price of Gold Live Gold & Silver Prices Historic Gold Prices Historic Silver Prices Gold Bullion Sterling Silver Royal Mint London Perth Mint Australia Canadian Mint Mint Marks Benedetto Pistrucci Trial of the Pyx Crown Gold US Gold Eagle US Silver Eagle Gold Maple Leaf Silver Maple Krugerrand Selling your Gold Gold Price Manipulation? Silver Price Manipulation? Advertisers Links Terms of Use Search Store
 |
Crown Gold
Crown Gold is a 22 kt (karat) gold alloy, introduced
in England for gold coin manufacture in 1526 (by Henry VIII) on the
basis of superior wear properties, and perhaps to save the state
mint costs. It is 22/24 = .91667 fine or 91.667% gold. Previously,
gold sovereign coins were made from 23 kt gold, but this was soft
and invited deliberate filing, and also non-intentional wear.
Alloying metals in England and the United Kingdom
The alloying metal in England was and is traditionally copper-only,
although a component of 1.25% silver replacing the same weight of
copper, as a softening agent, was briefly used in gold sovereigns in
the one year of 1887 for better production of an image of Queen
Victoria for the Golden Jubilee of her reign. Crown gold with copper
as the only alloying metal other than gold, remains the standard
used in the British gold sovereign, which is still minted.
Alloying metals in the United States
In the United states, gold circulating coins were minted in 22 kt.
gold alloy of crown gold purity, until 1834. However, these pre-1834
U.S. coins differed from their English counterparts in containing a
significant component (about 6%) of silver.
In 1834 the fineness of U.S. coin gold was decreased from 22 kt to
.8992 fine (21.6 kt) to discourage coin melting. In 1837, all silver
was removed from U.S. gold coins and the gold content increased
slightly to 0.900 fine. This 90% gold-copper alloy continued in the
U.S. from 1837 until gold coins were removed from circulation in the
U.S. in 1933. None of these ~ 90% American circulating-coin gold
alloys contain quite as much gold as the crown gold standard.
Pure Gold Bullion Coins
Before the mid twentieth century, all gold coins were intended to
circulate as money. Today, this is no longer the case in much of the
world, due to daily significant fluctuation in gold prices. A new
set of modern gold coins known as bullion coins have been designed
and produced in this era, each with an exact government-guaranteed
total gold content, in Troy ounces, or fractions thereof. These
often have nominal face values which are not used, since they are
almost uniformly intended as collectors' items. Some of these gold
bullion coins are "pure" gold of 24 kt, .999 or .9999 or even .99999
fine (see Canadian Maple Leaf). Since these coins tend to be
carefully stored rather than casually circulated, the delicacy and
low durability of pure gold does not create a problem.

Return to Crown Gold for some Bullion Coins
However, in a notable exception, the South African
Krugerrand, first
produced in 1967, and the first of these modern coins, was produced
in the exact traditional crown gold recipe of 22 kt gold (remainder
copper), because it was originally intended to circulate as coin
currency. The Krugerrand is now considered primarily a bullion coin,
and (as always) has no face value imprinted on it.
A few other gold bullion coins never intended for
circulation have nevertheless been produced for purely historical
reasons in the traditional crown gold purity, including the the gold
sovereign (in exact gold/copper historical ratio), as well as now
the American Gold Eagle series of
bullion coins, the latter which
again now follows the original (pre-1834) 22 kt or 0.91667 fine gold
standard (although its silver content of 3% is slightly different
from that of any coin the U.S. has previously produced).
PLEASE SEEK
PROFESSIONAL ADVICE BEFORE YOU BUY OR SELL GOLD, SILVER & COINS.
|
|