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Buy British Gold Coins – 535 Years of Royal Mint Excellence
The United Kingdom is the only nation on Earth where continuous gold coinage can be traced back over 535 years to a single institution: the Royal Mint. With 89 products at CelticGold, British gold coins encompass four distinct premium series – the historic Sovereign, the investment Britannia, the collector Queen's Beasts and the current Royal Tudor Beasts – covering the full spectrum from pure investment gold to numbered collector pieces of extraordinary artistic quality.
History – From Henry VII's Sovereign to King Charles III
The history of British gold coinage begins on 28 October 1489, when King Henry VII ordered the first Sovereigns struck at the Tower of London – large, heavy gold coins showing the king enthroned in majesty, worth exactly one pound sterling. Henry VII chose both name and design deliberately: after the chaos of the Wars of the Roses, the new Tudor dynasty needed to project absolute, unquestioned authority.
The Sovereign became the most recognised coin in the world during the 19th century. Under Queen Victoria, the British Empire minted Sovereigns at six locations simultaneously – London, Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Ottawa and Bombay – supplying the global reserve currency to every corner of its territories. The gold standard meant that one Sovereign was one pound sterling was a fixed weight of gold; the coin was money itself.
The iconic St George and the Dragon reverse design was created in 1817 by Italian sculptor Benedetto Pistrucci, commissioned by the Master of the Mint following the victory at Waterloo. Pistrucci's masterpiece – the armoured knight on a rearing horse, driving his lance into the dragon – has appeared on every modern Sovereign since. After circulating Sovereigns ended in 1932 (when Britain left the gold standard), the Royal Mint has produced them continuously as investment and collector pieces.
In 1987, the Royal Mint launched the Britannia investment coin. The Queen's Beasts series (2016–2022) and its successor the Royal Tudor Beasts (from 2022) cemented the Royal Mint's position as Europe's most creative numismatic institution.
Sovereign or Britannia – which is the better investment?
The Sovereign (7.322 g, 916.7/1,000) has the deeper history and smallest entry price of any British gold coin; the Britannia (31.103 g, 999.9/1,000) offers higher purity and modern security features. Both are immediately tradeable globally.
Is the Queen's Beasts series complete?
Yes – the Red Dragon of Wales (2022) closed the 10-coin series. Complete sets are actively sought by collectors. Buy early: Royal Tudor Beasts (current series) are still available at issue prices.