For centuries gold has been praised for its beauty and value. This historic 22 carat gold coin is the perfect gift for a birthday in 2010. The gold bullion half-sovereign is exceptionally popular year on year and is available in a colourful birthday gift sleeve which you can personalise.
Show/hide further information about this product
Original Benedetto Pistrucci 1820s St George and the dragon design
Hand-crafted original
Original nineteenth-century tools from the Museum collection (The Royal Mint at Tower Hill), some of which were almost certainly used by Benedetto Pistrucci himself, have been used unmodified in the modern production process, revealing his dynamic masterpiece of St George and the dragon in all its glory.
Gold Sovereigns of the Nineteenth Century
As part of a major coinage reform in 1816, William Wellesley Pole, the then Master of the Royal Mint, wanted coins to be made to the very highest standards and he employed the Italian gem engraver, Benedetto Pistrucci, to realise his aspirations. By the following year Pistrucci had created his portrayal of St George and the dragon for the gold sovereign, a design of such classic beauty that it has endured to this day. Over the years his original has been modified many times until it has developed into the design with which we are all familiar.
The History of an Enduring Masterpiece
For the original sovereign of 1817, St George was shown holding a shattered lance in his right hand, another portion of which lay on the ground below. Pistrucci constantly strove for perfection in his work, however, and made an important change to his masterpiece for the silver crown of 1818 when he replaced the broken lance with a short sword. Although subsequent sovereigns of George III remained unchanged, it was this amended version that graced the first sovereigns of George IV issued in the early 1820s. Other changes are evident on these sovereigns too, for the surrounding garter belt had been removed and the Saint’s helmet stripped of its streamer. Using the tools of the Master Happily, the valuable coining tools from these early sovereigns have been preserved. They were entrusted to the Royal Mint Engraving Team. The result is a sovereign with a reverse design that in every respect is the work of Pistrucci himself.