Britannia Silver Oval Box 1935 - Secondhand

Britannia Silver Oval Box 1935 - Secondhand

Regular price £375.00 £0.00

An oval Britannia standard silver oval lidded box.  The lid has a raised centre section and the base has a lipped edge at the base.  It is hallmarked on the side of the base and inside the lid.

Size: 92.00 x 74.00 x 27.00mm

Britannia hallmarked London 1935 by PGD & Sn  

Also marked with the coronation marks for Edward VIII

Our stock ref: S842TX

NOTE Britannia silver uses a higher standard of silver which is 958 instead of the sterling standard of 925. 

Britannia silver was the government's answer in the effort to stop the treasonous destruction of official currency during the silver shortage at the end of the 17th Century. Britannia silver existed as the United Kingdom's purity standard for wrought silver items from 1697 to 1720. A silver shortage at the end of the seventeenth century saw individuals across the nation clipping the edges of silver coins already in circulation and melting them down to create various types of silver objects.

These objects were highly lucrative due to the nation's limited silver supply, but the government was challenged to find a solution to this widespread act of treason. In order to put an end to coin clipping, parliament passed a law that raised the legal standard of wrought silver items up to 95.84%. This became known as Britannia silver.

Britannia silver was marked with the image of Britannia, seated, thus replacing the symbol of Sterling silver, the Lion Passant. This purity increase allowed for silver goods from the United Kingdom to be exported to France, as the French government had historically adopted a higher standard of silver that former British silver works did not adhere to.  

That being said, Britannia silver was immediately unpopular with silversmiths because it was a more expensive raw material and the increased purity made the pieces softer and, as a result, less durable. Silver tradesmen pressured parliament to pass a bill restoring the former Sterling Silver Standard, and by 1720 Sterling silver was once again the minimum standard for wrought silver items in the United Kingdom. Britannia was left as an optional higher standard.