Australian fifty-cent coin

Fifty Cents
Australia
Value 0.50 AUD
Mass 15.55 g
Diameter 31.65 mm
Thickness 2.80 mm (maximum) [1]
Edge Plain
Shape Dodecagonal
Composition 75% Copper, 25% Nickel
Years of minting 1969–present
Catalog number
Obverse

Obverse Design = Elizabeth II,
Queen of Australia
Designer Ian Rank-Broadley
Design date 1999
Reverse
Design Australian coat of arms
Designer Stuart Devlin
Design date 1965

The twelve-sided Australian fifty-cent coin is the third-highest denomination coin of the Australian dollar and the largest in terms of size in circulation. It is the only 12-sided coin of its size in the southern hemisphere. It was introduced in 1969 [2] to replace the round fifty-cent coin issued in 1966.

The original, round, 50-cent coin was made of 80% silver and 20% copper; but as the value of a free-floating silver price became higher, the coin's bullion value became more valuable than its face value; so that version was withdrawn from circulation and replaced with the dodecagonal cupro-nickel version.

It is by diameter the largest Australian coin currently issued and second largest after the Crown of 1937–38. It is also the heaviest Australian coin in common circulation. Many commemorative designs have been issued, the large size allowing for detailed content.

With a diameter of 31.5 mm (1.24 in), the 50-cent coin is one of the largest in volume among those currently circulating in the world. Coins of larger diameter include the Costa Rican five-hundred-colones and the fifty-CFP Franc, both 32.9 mm.

Five-cent, ten-cent, twenty-cent, and fifty-cent coins are legal tender up to the sum of $5.[3]

Obverse

As with all coins of Australia, the reigning monarch features on the obverse. Only Elizabeth II has been monarch during the coin's existence.

Unlike other decimal denominations, four different portraits of Her Majesty have been used on 50c coins. A unique effigy by Vladimir Gottwald was used for the 2000 Royal Visit commemorative fifty-cent piece.[4][5] This is the only Australian decimal coin to have an obverse designed by an Australian[6] and to have a portrait of the queen which is not also used on British currency.

The other three portraits have featured on all then-current denominations: from 1966 to 1984 one by Arnold Machin,[7] from 1985 to 1998 one by Raphael Maklouf,[8] and since 1999 a portrait by Ian Rank-Broadley.[9] These portraits were introduced to British coins in 1968, 1985, and 1998 respectively.[10]

Commemorative coins

The Australian fifty-cent coin was the first to display a variation of the reverse design in 1970 for the commemorating the bicentennial of Lieutenant James Cook's landing in Australia. Various other designs followed until the one-dollar and twenty-cent also included new designs.

YearSubjectMintage
1970Bicentenary of James Cook’s 1770 Voyage16,500,000
197725th Anniversary of the Accession of Queen Elizabeth II25,000,000
1981Marriage of HRH the Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer20,000,000
1982Brisbane XII Commonwealth Games49,600,000
1988Australian Bicentenary9,000,000
199125th Anniversary of Decimal Currency4,700,000
1994United Nations International Year of the Family21,300,000
199550th Anniversary of the End of World War 2 - Edward 'Weary' Dunlop15,900,000
1998200th Anniversary of the Voyage of Bass and Flinders22,400,000
2000Millennium year16,600,000
Visit of Queen Elizabeth II5,100,000
2001Centenary of Federation43,100,000
Centenary of Federation - ACT2,000,000
Centenary of Federation - NSW3,000,000
Centenary of Federation - Norfolk Island2,200,000
Centenary of Federation - NT2,100,000
Centenary of Federation - QLD2,300,000
Centenary of Federation - SA2,400,000
Centenary of Federation - Tas2,200,000
Centenary of Federation - Vic2,800,000
Centenary of Federation - WA2,400,000
2002Year of the Outback11,500,000
2003Australia’s Volunteers13,900,000
2004Primary School Design Competition winner (John Serrano)10,200,000
200560th Anniversary of the End of World War 226,600,000
Secondary School Commonwealth Games Design Competition winner (Kelly Just)20,500,000
2010Australia Day11,400,000
201450th Anniversary of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies3,000,000
201650th Anniversary of Decimal Currency6,911,000*
201750th anniversary of the 1967 Referendum / 25th anniversary of the Mabo Decision162,000
"*" denotes partial numbers for 2016 - total production to be confirmed
Reference:[11]

See also

References

  1. http://www.comlaw.gov.au/Details/F2005L04157
  2. "Australian Coin Collecting Blog - The Complete Guide to Australian 50 Cent Coins".
  3. "RBA Banknotes: Legal Tender". banknotes.rba.gov.au. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
  4. http://www.cruzis-coins.com/50c/2000.html
  5. "Gottwald (2000) - Royal Australian Mint".
  6. "Gottwald (2000) - Royal Australian Mint".
  7. "Machin (1966-1984) - Royal Australian Mint".
  8. "Maklouf (1985-1998) - Royal Australian Mint".
  9. "Rank-Broadley (1999-present) - Royal Australian Mint".
  10. "The five portraits of Her Majesty The Queen". The Royal Mint. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  11. "Fifty Cents". Royal Australian Mint. 8 January 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
Preceded by
Australian 50 cent coin (round)
Fifty Cents (Australian)
1969–present
Succeeded by
Current
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