Charles III's naval career is largely ceremonial footnote, but the broader tradition of Royal Navy bombardment coinage taps a lineage running from the Bombardment of Algiers in 1816 through to twentieth-century Pacific operations. The Solomon Islands has issued prolifically under licensed arrangements with European minting houses — primarily the Pobjoy and B.H. Mayer operations — producing themed collector pieces with little connection to the issuing territory itself.
Gold-plated iron is an unusual substrate choice; most comparable issues use copper or zinc alloy beneath the plating.
Charles III's naval career is largely ceremonial footnote, but the broader tradition of Royal Navy bombardment coinage taps a lineage running from the Bombardment of Algiers in 1816 through to twentieth-century Pacific operations. The Solomon Islands has issued prolifically under licensed arrangements with European minting houses — primarily the Pobjoy and B.H. Mayer operations — producing themed collector pieces with little connection to the issuing territory itself.
Gold-plated iron is an unusual substrate choice; most comparable issues use copper or zinc alloy beneath the plating.