The Isle of Man has issued an almost bewildering volume of sovereign-sized bullion and commemorative pieces since the 1970s, when the Pobjoy Mint began its long relationship with the island's government — a partnership that produced more licensed numismatic output per capita than virtually any other jurisdiction its size. The Christmas sovereign series exploited a legal quirk: Man is a Crown dependency but not part of the UK, allowing it to issue coins bearing the monarch's effigy on entirely self-determined specifications and themes without reference to the Royal Mint.
KM# 2049 sits in a long run of annual Christmas issues stretching back decades, each a discrete licensing exercise rather than a monetary instrument.
The Isle of Man has issued an almost bewildering volume of sovereign-sized bullion and commemorative pieces since the 1970s, when the Pobjoy Mint began its long relationship with the island's government — a partnership that produced more licensed numismatic output per capita than virtually any other jurisdiction its size. The Christmas sovereign series exploited a legal quirk: Man is a Crown dependency but not part of the UK, allowing it to issue coins bearing the monarch's effigy on entirely self-determined specifications and themes without reference to the Royal Mint.
KM# 2049 sits in a long run of annual Christmas issues stretching back decades, each a discrete licensing exercise rather than a monetary instrument.