Information about what currencies were issued by Isle of Man, with lists of coinage, as well as periods when foreign-issued currencies were used. |
Currency | Manx Pound |
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Period | Manx Pound |
Used | 1971 - present |
Description | In 1971 the United Kingdom moved to a decimal currency with the pound subdivided into 100 pence. The Isle of Man Government, having issued its own banknotes for ten years, took the opportunity to approach the Royal Mint and request its own versions of the decimal coins, which were introduced in 1971. The island has its own circulating coinage, which is used in parallel with the British Pound Sterling; it also issues an extensive range of Non-Circulating Legal Tender (NCLT) coins for collectors, as well as bullion coins in a variety of formats and designs. |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Platinum Five Ounces 1986 Noble | 15 |
Platinum Five Ounces 1987 Noble | 11 |
Platinum Five Ounces 1988 Noble | unknown |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Platinum Ounce 1983 Noble | 1,794 |
Platinum Ounce 1984 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Ounce 1985 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Ounce 1986 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Ounce 1987 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Ounce 1988 Noble | 3,000 |
Platinum Ounce 1989 Noble | 3,000 |
Platinum Ounce 2009 Angel | 999 |
Platinum Ounce 2010 Angel | 500 |
Platinum Ounce 2013 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Ounce 2016 Noble | 90 |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Platinum Half Ounce 1984 Noble | 3,000 |
Platinum Half Ounce 1986 Noble | 2,015 |
Platinum Half Ounce 1987 Noble | 3,000 |
Platinum Half Ounce 1988 Noble | 3,000 |
Platinum Half Ounce 1989 Noble | 3,000 |
Platinum Half Ounce 1994 Noble | 250 |
Platinum Half Ounce 2016 Noble | 360 |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Platinum Quarter Ounce 1986 Noble | 6,015 |
Platinum Quarter Ounce 1987 Noble | 4,000 |
Platinum Quarter Ounce 1988 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Quarter Ounce 1989 Noble | 750 |
Platinum Quarter Ounce 1990 Noble | 3,000 |
Platinum Quarter Ounce 1996 Noble | 10,000 |
Platinum Quarter Ounce 2016 Noble | 360 |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Platinum Tenth-Ounce 1984 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Tenth-Ounce 1985 Noble | 104,000 |
Platinum Tenth-Ounce 1986 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Tenth-Ounce 1987 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Tenth-Ounce 1988 Noble | 5,000 |
Platinum Tenth-Ounce 1989 Noble | 5,000 |
Platinum Tenth-Ounce 2016 Noble | unknown |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Platinum Twentieth-Ounce 1989 Noble | 10,000 |
Platinum Twentieth-Ounce 1990 Noble | 1,000 |
Platinum Twentieth-Ounce 1992 Noble | unknown |
Platinum Twentieth-Ounce 1993 Noble | 1,000 |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Gold Twenty-five Ounces 1989 Angel | unknown |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Gold Twenty Ounces 1988 Angel | 350 |
Coin Name | Mintage |
---|---|
Gold Fifteen Ounces 1987 Angel | 168 |
Gold Fifteen Ounces 1988 Angel | unknown |
Coin Name | Mintage |
---|---|
Gold Ten Ounces 1985 Angel | 147 |
Gold Ten Ounces 1986 Angel | 297 |
Gold Ten Ounces 1987 Angel | 180 |
Gold Ten Ounces 1988 Angel | 250 |
Coin Name | Mintage |
---|---|
Gold Five Ounces 1985 Angel | 194 |
Gold Five Ounces 1986 Angel | 339 |
Gold Five Ounces 1987 Angel | 177 |
Gold Five Ounces 1988 Angel | 250 |
Gold Five Ounces 1994 Angel | 94 |
Coin Name | Mintage |
---|---|
Silver Twenty Ounces 1988 Angel | unknown |
Coin Name | Mintage |
---|---|
Gold Half Ounce 1984 Angel | (10,000) |
Gold Half Ounce 1985 Angel | 1,827 |
Gold Half Ounce 1986 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 1987 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 1988 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 1989 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 1994 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 1995 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 1996 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 1997 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 1998 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 1999 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 2008 Angel | 500 |
Gold Half Ounce 2011 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Ounce 2011 Noble | 1,000 |
Gold Half Ounce 2012 Angel, Piedfort | 999 |
Gold Half Ounce 2018 Angel | 499 |
Gold Half Ounce 2024 Angel | 1,500 |
Gold Half Ounce 2024 Noble | 1,500 |
Gold Half Ounce 2025 Angel | unknown |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Gold Half Gram 2011 Angel | 10,000 |
Gold Half Gram 2012 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Gram 2013 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Gram 2015 Angel | unknown |
Gold Half Gram 2017 Angel | 15,000 |
Gold Half Gram 2018 Angel | 15,000 |
Gold Half Gram 2020 Noble | 15,000 |
Gold Half Gram 2022 Noble | 15,000 |
Gold Half Gram 2023 Noble | 15,000 |
Gold Half Gram 2024 Angel | 5,000 |
Gold Half Gram 2024 Noble | 5,000 |
Gold Half Gram 2025 Angel | unknown |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Silver Kilo 2010 Noble | 500 |
Silver Kilo 2025 Angel | 50 |
Coin Name | Mintage |
---|---|
Silver Ounce 1995 Angel | 5,000 |
Silver Ounce 2010 Angel | 50,000 |
Silver Ounce 2011 Noble | unknown |
Silver Ounce 2014 Angel | unknown |
Silver Ounce 2015 Angel | unknown |
Silver Ounce 2016 Angel | 100,000 |
Silver Ounce 2017 Angel | 6,100 |
Silver Ounce 2017 Noble | 6,000 |
Silver Ounce 2018 Angel | 20,999 |
Silver Ounce 2018 Noble | 16,000 |
Silver Ounce 2019 Angel | 9,999 |
Silver Ounce 2020 Angel | 2,999 |
Silver Ounce 2021 Angel | unknown |
Silver Ounce 2022 Angel | 999 |
Silver Ounce 2024 Angel | 12,000 |
Silver Ounce 2024 Noble | 12,000 |
Silver Ounce 2025 Angel | unknown |
Coin Name | Mintage |
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Silver Half Ounce 2024 Angel | 22,500 |
Silver Half Ounce 2024 Noble | 22,500 |
Currency | Manx Pound (pre-decimal) |
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Period | Manx Pound (pre-decimal) |
Used | 1668 - 1971 |
Description | The first Manx coinage was issued privately in 1668 by John Murrey, a Douglas merchant, consisting of pennies equal to their English counterparts. These "Murrey Pennies" were made legal tender by order in 1679, when the Court of Tynwald outlawed the unofficial private coinage that had been circulating prior to and alongside John Murrey's pennies (English coinage was also allowed by this Act). In 1708, the Isle of Man Government approached the Royal Mint, and requested that coinage be issued for the island. The then Master of the Mint, Sir Isaac Newton, refused. As a result, the first Government issue of coins on Man took place in 1709. This coinage was made legal tender on 24 June 1710. In 1733 Tynwald took the opportunity to prohibit the circulation of any "base" (not silver or gold) coinage other than that issued by the Government. Because of the similarity between Manx and British coins, it was profitable to change shillings to Manx coinage and export them to Great Britain, making a profit of £2 for every £12 in Manx coinage so transferred. This happened on such a scale that by 1830 the island was almost totally deprived of copper coinage. In an attempt to resolve this problem, a proposal was introduced to abandon the separate Manx coinage in favour of British coins. This was rejected by the House of Keys in 1834 but they were overruled by the British Government in 1839. An Act was passed declaring that "... the currency of Great Britain shall be and become, and is hereby declared to be, the currency of the Isle of Man", and this remains Manx law to this day. There was resentment on Man to this change, with some islanders feeling defrauded, and serious rioting took place in Douglas and Peel. These were known as the 'Copper Row' riots, and were put down by the Manx militia. The Royal Mint issued a total of £1,000 in copper coins. Following an Act in 1840, these were valued at 12 pence to the shilling. All coins issued before 1839 were declared by this law to no longer be 'current' and were recalled by the Board of Customs and exchanged by the Royal Mint at their original nominal value for the new coinage. After 1839, no further Manx coins were issued, and they gradually became scarce and were replaced in general circulation on the island by the coinage of the United Kingdom. They did not cease to be legal coinage on Man until decimalisation in 1971. Banknotes had been privately issued for the island since 1865. In 1971 the United Kingdom moved to a decimal currency with the pound subdivided into 100 pence. The Isle of Man Government, having issued its own banknotes for ten years, took the opportunity to approach the Royal Mint and request its own versions of the decimal coins, which were introduced in 1971. |
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