British coin Five Guineas
The British Five Guinea coin is one of the most spectacular and impressive pieces of machine-struck currency ever produced.
Throughout its period of production (1668-1753) it was a gold coin 37 millimetres in diameter and weighing between 41 and 42 grams. Although the coin is now known as the "five guinea" piece, during the 17th and 18th centuries it was also known as a five pound piece, as during the reign of Charles II a guinea was worth twenty shillings -- until its value was fixed at twenty-one shillings by a Royal Proclamation in 1717 the value fluctuated rather in the way that bullion coins do today.
This denomination shows the year of striking on the reverse; but also the edge inscription DECUS ET TUTAMEN ANNO REGNI -- An ornament and a safeguard, in the year of the reign... -- is followed by the regnal year of the monarch, in Latin words. In the case of Charles II, the regnal year is calculated from the execution of Charles I, so 1668 is ANNO REGNI VICESIMO, the twentieth year of the reign. The edge inscription was put on the coin before the other two sides were struck -- in the early years the blanks were cut out from a strip of gold which had been produced by horse power, then the blanks were sent to have the edge inscriptions impressed by a secret process devised by one Pierre Blondeau, a former engineer from the Paris mint who jealously guarded his methods. The blanks were then returned to the mint to have the obverse and reverse struck in a hand-operated press. Samuel Pepys gives a long and detailed description of the rolling, cutting, and striking of the blanks in his diary entry for 19 May 1663.
Many of the coins produced up to 1699 have an elephant and castle beneath the monarch's head, indicating that the gold was provided by the Africa Company. Coins of 1703 (Queen Anne ANNO REGNI SECVNDO) have the word VIGO under the Queen's head, indicating that the gold was captured from Spanish galleons in the Battle of Vigo Bay[?] in October 1702, but very few of these coins now remain in existence and they are extremely valuable (up to £50,000).
The regnal years used in this reign's coin issue were:
The five guinea coin was produced in each year of Charles II's reign from 1668 to 1684; before 1670 the weight limits were 41-42 grams, afterward 41.0-41.8 grams. The obverse and reverse of this coin were designed by John Roettier (1631-c.1700). The obverse showed a fine right-facing bust of the king wearing a laurel wreath, surrounded by the legend CAROLVS II DEI GRATIA, while the reverse showed four crowned cruciform shields bearing the arms of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland, between which were four sceptres, and in the centre were four interlinked "C"s, surrounded by the inscription MAG BR FRA ET HIB REX date.
| 1668: | VICESIMO | 1674: | VICESIMO SEXTO | 1680: | TRICESIMO SECVNDO |
| 1669: | VICESIMO PRIMO | 1675: | VICESIMO SEPTIMO | 1681: | TRICESIMO TERTIO |
| 1670: | VICESIMO SECVNDO | 1676: | VICESIMO OCTAVO | 1682: | TRICESIMO QVARTO |
| 1671: | VICESIMO TERTIO | 1677: | VICESIMO NONO | 1683: | TRICESIMO QVINTO |
| 1672: | VICESIMO QVARTO | 1678: | TRICESIMO | 1684: | TRICESIMO SEXTO |
| 1673: | VICESIMO QVINTO | 1679: | TRICESIMO PRIMO |
The regnal years for this reign are:
| 1686: | SECVNDO | 1687: | TERTIO | 1688: | QVARTO |
The regnal years for this joint reign are:
| 1691: | TERTIO | 1692: | QVARTO | 1693: | QVINTO | 1694: | SEXTO |
The coins of William III's reign weighed 41.6-41.7 grams. William's head faces right on his coins, with the legend GVLIELMVS III DEI GRATIA, while the reverse design of William and Mary's reign was judged to be unsuccessful, so the design reverted to that used by Charles II and James II, but with a small shield with the lion of Nassau in the centre, with the legend MAG BR FRA ET HIB REX date.
The regnal years for this reign are:
| 1699: | UNDECIMO | 1700: | DVODECIMO | 1701: | DECIMO TERTIO |
Queen Anne five guineas were subsequently produced in 1705, 1706, 1709, 1711, 1713 and 1714. The obverse of the coin throughout her reign shows the left-facing effigy of the queen, with the legend ANNA DEI GRATIA.The general design of the reverse was similar to that of the previous reign, with four crowned cruciform shields bearing the arms of England, Scotland, Ireland, and France, separated by sceptres and with a central rose, and the legend MAG BRI FR ET HIB REG date. However, the union of England and Scotland necessitated a change in the design of the arms on the shield in 1706 (although the actual union took place on 1 May 1707, just over a month after the start of the year, the bill for the Act of Union received the Royal Assent on 6 March 1707 (i.e. still in 1706 by the old-style calendar)), therefore coins dated 1706 appear with both reverses. The order of the arms appearing on the cruciform shields until 1706 was England, then Scotland, then France, then Ireland. With the union, the English and Scottish arms appear conjoined on one shield, with the left half being the English arms and the right half being the Scottish arms, and the order of arms appearing on the shields becomes England+Scotland, France, England+Scotland, Ireland. In 1706, with the Union, the central rose on the reverse was replaced by the Star of the Order of the Garter.
The regnal years for this reign are:
| 1703: | SECVNDO | 1705: | QVARTO | 1706: | QVINTO | 1709: | OCTAVO |
| 1711: | DECIMO | 1713: | DVODECIMO | 1714: | DECIMO TERTIO |
The regnal years for this reign are:
| 1716: | SECVNDO | 1717: | TERTIO | 1720: | SEXTO | 1726: | DECIMO TERTIO |
The obverse has a left-facing bust of the king (with an older head from 1746), with the legend GEORGIVS II DEI GRATIA, while the reverse features a single large crowned shield with the quarters containing the arms of England+Scotland, France, Hanover, and Ireland, and the legend M B F ET H REX F D B ET L D S R I A T ET E -- King of Great Britain, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, Duke of Brunswick and Lueneburg, Arch-Treasurer and Elector of the Holy Roman Empire.
The regnal years for this reign are:
| 1729: | TERTIO | 1731: | QVARTO | 1735: | OCTAVO | 1738: | DVODECIMO |
| 1741: | DECIMO QVARTO | 1746: | DECIMO NONO | 1748: | VICESIMO SECVNDO | 1753: | VICESIMO SEXTO |