5 Coins

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You may have noticed we’ve been talking about £5 coins a lot over the past few weeks and lots of collectors have been asking how rare their £5 coins are.

The £5 coin was first issued in 1990 as a replacement for the commemorative crown with a face value of 25p. They are usually reserved to commemorate significant British anniversaries and are a favourite among collectors as they are not intended for general circulation.

Rockstar Freddy is a greedy bear and loves money and wants five coins for some reason nobody knows. But nobody in the pizzeria wants to give him what he desi.

Using current Royal Mint figures we have put together three graphs where you can see just how rare your commemorative crown is, from the 1972 Silver Wedding Crown to the Brilliant Uncirculated Coronation £5 in 2013.

The differences in the mintage figures really are remarkable. Take a look below and see just how rare your £5 coin actually is.

The first crown ever to be issued was the 1972 Silver Wedding Coin and incidentally this is the rarest 25p UK coin from the Royal Mint with a mintage of 7,452,100. This 1972 crown was the first British coin to have a face value of 25 pence; previous crowns had been Five Shillings face value. Also, for the first time in modern times, the obverse did not incorporate a date, but merely bore the Queen’s name and titles surrounding her portrait.

The £5 coin with the lowest mintage in the history of UK £5 coins, is the circulated 2008 Prince Charles 60th Birthday £5 coin. Just 14,088 circulated quality coins were struck by the Royal Mint in 2008 to mark the 60th birthday of Prince Charles. The coins inscription ICH DIEN means ‘I serve’ and is taken from the Badge of the Prince of Wales.

* Individual Royal Mint BU Pack sales figures only

Out of the Brilliant Uncirculated £5 coins sold in individual The Royal Mint Packs, the 2014 Queen Anne £5 is the rarest. This coin has amintage of just 12,181 and was struck to mark the 300th anniversary since the death of Queen Anne.The design bears an elegant portrait of Queen Anne, styled by Mark Richards FRBS as an eighteenth-century miniature.

How many of these £5 coins do you have in your collection? Do you own one of the rarest £5 coins? Let us know via Facebook, Twitter or leave a comment below!

The UK’s VERY FIRST Decimal Crown

Click here to own the UK’s very first UK Decimal Crown for just £5.

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Tarot Card Meanings
Pooling resources allows you to make bolder moves and larger investments in future projects.
Universal Waite deck © U.S. Games Systems, Inc.

Watch Now: Five of Coins Video

Learn the meaning of the Five of Coins Tarot card in under a minute!


General Meaning

This suit, most often named 'Coins' or 'Pentacles', is a symbol for a magical talisman that represented wealth or potential. This suit represents something supportive that is available to you -- whether it be health, some kind of talent, a material or financial resource.

The Five of this suit is the card of desire and gratification, expressed in classical tradition as flattery and false promises. This card represents both the seducer and the one seduced. There is undeniable excitement in the attraction of opposites; we have all had delightful moments of magnetism with a stranger. However, if promises are only spoken to achieve short-term gratification with no intent of follow-through, or the attraction appears as competition to more fulfilling relationships, the long-term result won't be worth the thrill of the chase.

The appearance of a viable relationship does not always bear out, so don't put anything of real value at risk over an infatuation. Since the suit here is Coins, this is as likely to be related to business as to pleasure. Try to remove the influence of glamour from your thinking.

Note: In the English decks, like the Rider-Waite, the sickly poor freezing outside a well lit church warn of the painful outcomes of bad choices, rather than focusing on the dynamic tension of the choosing itself.

In the Reversed Position

The Five of Coins reversed suggests that you should take a hard look at a situation and root out possible deceptions. Perhaps you are being deceived or you are the one deceiving others (or yourself).

There may be a part of you that's so eager to believe in fairy tales or rescue fantasies, that you would fail to check the fine print or a would-be savior's credentials. It's time to start asking the hard questions. If you can't bring yourself to do that, then you cannot succeed in this situation.

In the Advice Positon

Coins

The Five of Coins in this position advises you to create contractual agreements with those around you who have similar interests. In this kind of situation, there is strength in numbers. Put your heads together and devise a bold plan for future objectives and decide how to invest in their success. This Five of Coins recommends teamwork and the mutual benefits a combined effort can yield.

Note: In the English decks, like the Rider-Waite, the sickly poor freezing outside a well-lit church warn of the painful outcomes of bad choices, rather than focusing on the dynamic tension of the choosing itself.

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Five of Coins card in all decks.

8-Bit Tarot
Angel Tarot
Archeon
Art of Life
Cary-Yale Visconti Tarocchi
Cat's Eye
Chinese
Classic
Cosmic
Crow's Magick
Dark Exact
Dragon
English Magic Tarot
Esoterico
Faerie Tarot
Fantastical Tarot
Feng Shui
Fradella
Ghosts & Spirits
Goddess
Gummy Bear
Halloween
Herbal
Ibis
Jolanda
Lovers Path
Marseilles
Medieval Cat
Melanated Classic Tarot
Modern Medieval

5 Coins Biddy

Motherpeace Tarot
Napo Tarot
Old English
Omegaland
Oswald Wirth
Phantas-
magoric
Renaissance
Royal Thai

5 Coins Tarot

Sacred Art
Salvador Dali
Smith Waite Centennial
Stairs
5 Coins
Starter
Swiss (1JJ)
Tarot of a Moon Garden
Tarot of the Spirit
The New Palladini Tarot
Universal Waite

5 Coins Of Jesus

Vanessa
Whimsical

5 Coins Seattle

Zerner Farber Tarot