Part of a long-running Cook Islands micro-gold program that packaged fractional bullion inside oversized collector cards, these pieces were struck by the Pobjoy Mint in Surrey. Henry I — fourth son of William the Conqueror — famously standardized English weights and measures, with the yard allegedly defined by the length of his own arm.
Part of a long-running Cook Islands micro-gold program that packaged fractional bullion inside oversized collector cards, these pieces were struck by the Pobjoy Mint in Surrey. Henry I — fourth son of William the Conqueror — famously standardized English weights and measures, with the yard allegedly defined by the length of his own arm.