Bluffs and Piasa Bird, 2016

1919 Halfpenny from the UK

Citation

“1919 Halfpenny from the UK,” Madison Historical, accessed December 3, 2024, https://madison-historical.siue.edu/archive/items/show/2247.

Rights

The content of Madison Historical: The Online Encyclopedia and Digital Archive is publicly available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Encyclopedia articles, oral histories, web design, and other content original to Madison Historical are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Images in encyclopedia articles not part of the digital archive are either in the public domain or Madison Historical received use permission by the original creators. While in most cases Madison Historical received permission to publish archive items from the institution or individual who possessed the item, it has not determined their copyright status. Please contact the possessing institution or individual for additional information regarding copyright status.

Description

This is a Halfpenny from 1919 when the UK controlled India made from bronze, stating "George the Fifth, by the grace of god King of all Britain, Defennder of the Faith, Emperor of India, in Latin." By long-standing traditions, the legends of ruling British monarchs are rendered in Latin. On the front is George V's bare face and on the back is the figure of Britannia seated facing right on a rock wearing a helmet and flowing robes and she holds a trident with a shield which bears the combined crosses of the Union Flag.

This coin was photographed as part of a Madison Historical class visit to Liberty Middle School in spring 2020. It was brought to class by Varsha Venigalla. The coin was given the student's mother by their grandmother when their mother came to America.

Source

  • Wyen, Leonard Charles

Subjects

  • government
  • culture

Contributor

  • Venigalla, Varsha

Date

1919

Type

  • Object

Format

  • jpg

Coverage

  • India
  • 1919

Identifier

  • Venigalla-Varsha-O-001
We are always committed to accuracy in our articles and archive items. If you notice a mistake or have a suggestion, please contact us.