This piece commemorates the 375th anniversary of the execution of Charles I in 1649 — an event that temporarily abolished the monarchy and left England under Cromwellian republican rule for eleven years. The Royal Mint itself was deeply implicated in that political rupture; its output during the Interregnum bore no royal portrait for the first time in centuries.
Charles III issuing a coin honoring his beheaded predecessor carries a certain dynastic irony that the Mint's marketing materials predictably sidestep.
This piece commemorates the 375th anniversary of the execution of Charles I in 1649 — an event that temporarily abolished the monarchy and left England under Cromwellian republican rule for eleven years. The Royal Mint itself was deeply implicated in that political rupture; its output during the Interregnum bore no royal portrait for the first time in centuries.
Charles III issuing a coin honoring his beheaded predecessor carries a certain dynastic irony that the Mint's marketing materials predictably sidestep.