British Colonial - Petoria: 1929-1932
Sovereign - King George V
The sovereign now only Bullion was not minted in London Mint after
1925, but continude to be minted in few Branches of Royal Mint.
With a smaller head of King George V, only 3 of 7 Mints continued
from 1929 till the great depresion ceased minting in 1932.
SPECIFICATIONS |
Denomination | Sovereign |
Metal | Gold 0.916 |
Alloy | Ag/Cu 0.?? |
Diameter | 22.1 mm |
Thickness | 1.5 mm |
Weight Legal | 7.99 gms |
Weight | 7.99 gms |
Shape | Round |
Edge | Milled |
Die-Axis | 0° |
Mint | Royal, London |
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Obverse : The bare smaller head of King George~V facing left. Around
periphery legend GEORGEIVS V D.G.BRITT:OMN:REX F.D.IND:IMP: .
Mint Engraver Edgar Bertram Mackennal R.A. placed small
initials B. M. in relief at bootom of the Truncation.
Reverse: St. George with Steamer flowing from Helmet, mounted on horse
rearing right, slaying, with sword in right hand, the dragon on
ground. Mint Year below the representation of ground, with designer
Benedetto Pistrucci's initials B.P. to the right.
Note that King George~V, St George Sovereigns were minted with
Mint mark on the representation of ground on reverse.
Royal Mint | Start | End | Mint Mark
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Melbourne | 1929 | 1931 | M
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Perth | 1929 | 1931 | P
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Petoria | 1929 | 1932 | SA
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These King George V Sovereigns minted between 1929 and 1932 had a smaller head.
Note also the sharp cutoff of truncation, unlike the King George V
sovereigns minted between 1911 and 1928.
World War I and the depression in the west increased the value of the
Indian Rupee till it was fixed in 1927 at 1s 4d. The Pound Sterling
was then worth Rs 13.33.
The only George VI gold sovereigns were 1937 Proof Specimen struck to
commemorate the corronation with a mintage of only 5,500.
Ref: The Gold Sovereign. by M. A. Marsh.
1999, Cambridge U.K., 2nd ed. 118pp. Illustr. colour
The Sovereign was scanned at 600 dpi and displayed at 300 dpi
It was purchased 2015 August as Bullion from a collector who had
it as an investment.