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HomeWorld CoinsThe Royal Mint Selects Designer for 2016 Remembrance Day Coin

The Royal Mint Selects Designer for 2016 Remembrance Day Coin

remembranceday2016

A Royal Mint coin designer has taken inspiration from the wreath that lies at the foot of The Royal Mint’s on-site war memorial for the design of the organization’s 2016 commemorative £5 Remembrance Day coin. The memorial is formed of bricks from The Royal Mint’s previous location on Tower Hill, and honors colleagues who have lost their lives in times of war.

Thomas Docherty is the fourth coin designer to be selected to design the special Remembrance Day coin, which traditionally features the poppy, a flower widely recognized as a symbol of remembrance. Thomas’ design depicts a wreath, a symbol used by nations across the world to remember and commemorate the fallen.

Thomas said of his design: “This wreath is not only personal to us at The Royal Mint but also reflects the ‘everyman’ we all commemorate on Remembrance Day; from the wreath-layers to the poppy wearers all over the country. I wanted to paint the colors of the poppies boldly and vibrantly, hopefully emphasizing that the poppy is a symbol of remembrance, but also one of hope for the future.”

The coin, which is available in Silver Proof and Brilliant Uncirculated finishes, has been color-printed using a technical ‘trichromatic’ printing process that layers color onto the coin to capture every detail of the vibrant red coloring of the poppy.

royalmintremembrancepckTheir name liveth for evermore

The inscription chosen for this year’s coin, ‘Their name liveth for evermore’ is widely used on war memorials around the world and comes from the Apocryphal Book of Ecclesiasticus, 44:1-14. The full quote is “Their bodies are buried in peace; but their name liveth for evermore.”

This well-known passage is often read on Remembrance Day. The words were also chosen by novelist and poet Rudyard Kipling for inscription on war memorials, when he was a member of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. He was devastated by the death of his only son John in the conflict in 1915, just six weeks after his 18th birthday.

The Royal Mint
The Royal Minthttps://www.royalmint.com/
The Royal Mint has an unbroken history of minting British coinage dating back over 1,100 years. Based in the Tower of London for over 500 years, by 1812 the Mint had moved out of the Tower to premises on Tower Hill in London. In 1967, the building of a new Royal Mint began on its current site in South Wales, UK, to accommodate the minting of UK decimal coinage. Today, the Mint is the world’s largest export mint, supplying coins to the UK and overseas countries.

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