Gibraltar sovereigns occupy a peculiar legal niche: struck under Royal Mint licence but issued by a Crown Colony rather than the United Kingdom itself, which allowed Gibraltar to produce gold sovereign-format coins for the collector market without competing directly with the Royal Mint's own issues. The 1990 date corresponds to Gibraltar's push into the commemorative bullion space during a period when the territory was aggressively expanding its coin programme to generate revenue.
KM#43 specifically ties to the "Constitution" designation, marking the 1969 Gibraltar Constitution that established the territory's current governmental framework and reaffirmed British sovereignty following Spain's closure of the border.
Gibraltar sovereigns occupy a peculiar legal niche: struck under Royal Mint licence but issued by a Crown Colony rather than the United Kingdom itself, which allowed Gibraltar to produce gold sovereign-format coins for the collector market without competing directly with the Royal Mint's own issues. The 1990 date corresponds to Gibraltar's push into the commemorative bullion space during a period when the territory was aggressively expanding its coin programme to generate revenue.
KM#43 specifically ties to the "Constitution" designation, marking the 1969 Gibraltar Constitution that established the territory's current governmental framework and reaffirmed British sovereignty following Spain's closure of the border.