Skip to main content
Service phase: Beta

This is a new way to search our records, which we're still working on. Alternatively you can search our existing catalogue, Discovery.

Series

Royal Mint: Medals

Catalogue reference: MINT 16

What's it about?

MINT 16

General papers of the Royal Mint relating to medals.They include medal books 1831 to 1948; Board of Trade medals; commemorative medals; Foreign Office medals; medals for societies and other bodies; medals or tokens resembling coins; military and...

Full description and record details

Reference

MINT 16

Title
Royal Mint: Medals
Date

1805-1948

Description

General papers of the Royal Mint relating to medals.

They include medal books 1831 to 1948; Board of Trade medals; commemorative medals; Foreign Office medals; medals for societies and other bodies; medals or tokens resembling coins; military and naval medals, including the Waterloo Medal; Royal Prize Medals; Royal Victoria Medal; specimen medals.

Separated material

Proof specimens of all the medals made in the Royal Mint since 1801 are kept in the Mint Museum.

Held by
The National Archives, Kew
Legal status

Public Record(s)

Language

English

Physical description

123 files and volumes

Subjects
Topics
International
Trade and commerce
Medals
Navy
Administrative / biographical background

Before 1851, the making of medals in the Royal Mint was a matter solely for the engravers and was regarded as being the personal undertaking of the engravers, for which they received separate payment. A Royal Patent issued in July, 1669, gave the engravers the graving of all dies for medals of any metal, and the monopoly of medals bearing portraits of the King or Queen. In November, 1706, the Chief Officers of the Mint were empowered by Royal Warrant to employ the engravers in making official or public medals, such as the Coronation Medals. The engravers also used the facilities of the Royal Mint to produce commemorative medals to their own design for sale. Until the beginning of the nineteenth century, a coronation had been the one standard occasion for the creation and distribution of an official medal. The issue of official medals began to be extended with the award of the Waterloo Medal, which set the precedent for the award of general service and campaign medals for the Navy and Army. The engravers' right of private practice was terminated in 1851; and the Die Department became responsible for the manufacture of all medals, both official and private, made in the Mint.

The medals and stars issued after the First World War were manufactured by the Woolwich Arsenal and private contractors. A new Medal Unit was set up in the Mint in 1922 and from then onwards all Royal and State medals and decorations in metal, except the Victoria Cross, were supplied by the Royal Mint. Orders were also accepted for the design and production of private medals.

Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C11028/

Catalogue hierarchy

Over 27 million records

This record is held at The National Archives, Kew

11,296 records

Within the department: MINT

Records of the Royal Mint

You are currently looking at the series: MINT 16

Royal Mint: Medals

You may be interested in

Related records

Records that share similar topics with this record.