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UK Coin Collecting
The Coinage History of U.K. Coin Collecting
Money was never been quite so valuable until coin collecting entered
the world of the hobbyists.
Since its inception, coin collecting has continuously represented
the ancient way of preserving the history of the human race. Coin
collecting allows people to protect and conserve their nation’s
history. Through this kind of activity, coin collectors allow other
people to touch and examine the kinds of coins that ancient people
used.
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In the United Kingdom, coins are considered one of the most precious
relics that the nation has ever produced because most of their coins
are considered to be a true representation of the royalty. For
instance, U.K. coin collectors would be happy to own the 50-cent
coins that were manufactured by the Royal Canadian Mint for the
“Golden Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II.”
Facts about UK Coin Collecting
Unlike in the U.S., coin collecting in U.K. uses different terms in
categorizing the kinds of coins that are collected. For instance, in
the UK coins that were circulated from 1971 to 1981, the term “new
pence” was used to differentiate them from the so called “ancient
pre-decimal pennies”.
By the year 1982, experts felt the need to change the word “new”
into a more concrete characteristic that would denote the value of
the coin as well. Therefore, the terms “two” or “thirty” were used
as well as other terminologies that would indicate the coins worth.
After a year, the “two pence” or the “2p” coins were so common that
the coin collectors had very little demand for them so the Royal
Mint continued to issue the “2p” coins but only in sets that were
exclusively distributed to coin collectors. There are only 20 “2p”
coins that still bear the “new pence” wording on the reverse side in
circulation and new coin collectors who wish to collect these coins
will have difficulty in finding them.
In line with UK history, the UK coin collecting has undergone many
changes. The very first change was the “decimalisation” of the
coins. With the inception of the “decimal coinage,” the English
coinage system was established on relationships that indicate the
new value of the ancient coins. For example, the coin that used to
be known as 2 halfpence is now converted into 1 penny, while 20
shillings is equal to 1 pound or £1.
UK coin collecting is, indeed, not just mere realization of a hobby
but a concrete representation of what was transcribed in the history
of UK.
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