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The British Royal Mint - Brief Historical Notes

by: chardcoins( 5701Feedback score is 5,000 to 9,999) Top 25 Reviewer
3 out of 7 people found this guide helpful.
Guide viewed: 2855 times Tags: british | royal | mint | royal mint | london


The British Royal Mint

The Romans
The Romans set up the first London mint about the end of the 3rd century A.D. but it functioned for no more than about 40 years. Minting was resumed in London soon after 650 A.D. but it was not until the reign of Alfred the Great (871 - 899) that a London mint became more firmly established and its history continuous.


Coin Production as it Would Have Been in Roman Britain & The Royal Mint at Tower Hill in London

Ethelred II
At that time it was one of about 30 mints and the number increased to more than 70 in the reign of Ethelred II (978 - 1016) before beginning to decline, By the middle of the 13th century minting was mainly confined to London and Canterbury and from the mid 16th century, London's monopoly was normally complete.

Where Was It?
The location of the early London mint is not clear. Certainly by about 1279 it had moved to secure quarters within the Tower of London where it remained for the next 500 years.

Tower Hill
The mechanisation of minting processes in the 17th century aggravated the already cramped conditions in the Tower and in 1811 the mint moved to a purpose built factory nearby at Tower Hill. By the 1960's, after much extension and renovation, little remained of the original mint building.

Llantrisant
Rebuilding was proposed, and it was the task of producing many millions of coins in readiness for decimalisation in 1971, while at the same time not neglecting overseas customers, which finally prompted the decision in 1967 to build a new mint at Llantrisant in South Wales.

Mintmarks
Throughout most of this period, the Royal Mint, has been one of the few mints in the world which does not normally use a mintmark, at least for British coins. Most other mints have employed a mint letter or other mark.
In 1983 a mintmark was introduced on the new one pound coin issued for the first time in that year.

Llantrisant Mint Mark on the 1983 One Pound Coin
On the milled edge of the coin is the Llantrisant mint mark - a cross crosslet. This is the first United Kingdom coin to be struck with this distinctive feature. The shape of the cross alluding to Llantrisant, which translated from the Welsh means "Church or Parish of the Three Saints".

Visiting The Royal Mint
The Royal Mint maintain a small "Coin Shop" at Llantrisant, which is open to the public.
Obviously, this only sells Royal Mint products, not competing products such as krugerrands.
It is not now possible for the public to have conducted tours round the Mint. These used to be available at the old Tower Hill premises, indeed I had the pleasure of a tour, as a member of the public, in about 1965.
When the new mint opened at Llantrisant, for a number of years, public tours were available. These were stopped about 10 years ago for various reasons, security, and Health & Safety regulations.
The Royal Mint is an efficient, modern busy factory, but like most factories it contains some danger. I was fortunate enough to have a conducted tour around it on Friday, 10th March, 2000. I was able to see far more than on the previous "public" tour, but can well understand that such tours could easily interfere with production. There are numerous fork lift trucks transporting tons of metal in various forms, loading them into overhead hoppers, and moving them between processes. Although the factory appears well-designed, and much of the machinery features safety protection barriers, it would clearly be undesirable on safety grounds, to have large numbers of visitors on the premises.

Which Llantrisant?
I would advise that it is not worthwhile making a diversion or special journey to visit the Royal Mint's shop, but possibly worth a brief visit if you happen to be in the area.
What is worth noting, though, is there are at least two places named Llantrisant, and they are close enough to confuse visitors, being about 40 miles apart in the same part of South Wales. One is a small village north-east of Newport, the Llantrisant which contains the Royal Mint is to the West of Cardiff.

The London Mint Office
The Royal Mint has no connection with "The London Mint Office", except that the latter retail a number of the former's products.

Copyright
All our images and text are copyright owned by Lawrence Chard of Chard Coins. This page is taken from our original "24carat" website.

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Guide ID: 10000000001872531Guide created: 17/09/06 (updated 18/07/09)

 
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