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British Coins of 1692 were those of William and Mary. For this reign, the old hammered sovereigns had long ceased, and modern milled sovereigns (20 shillings) were not minted till George III's reign, in 1817. So there are no sovereigns of 1692. Just guineas. To-day a guinea (the term still being used occasionally in auction bidding) is 21 shillings, but neither sovereigns nor guineas had any set value. At the beginning of the reign, 1688, guineas were valued at 21/6d, but by 1694 they circulated for as much as 30s. If you have a gold coin of William and Mary, you first need to find whether it is a half-guinea, guinea, double guinea, or 5 guinea piece. The latter was not minted that year. All these milled gold coins were of 22 carats gold; if they were worn, or clipped, the shop or bank would be likely to weigh them on scales, and take off value for underweight coins. Even households had these tiny pocket scales. And of course, if the price of gold rose significantly, gold coins disappeared to hoarders and melters.

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16y ago

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