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Quarter farthing
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{{short description|Former piece of British coinage}} {{one source|date=March 2023}} {{Infobox coin | Country = United Kingdom | Denomination = One-quarter farthing | Value = Β£0.00026041{{overline|6}}<br />0.0625''[[Penny (British pre-decimal coin)|d]]'' | Unit = | Mass = 1.2 | Diameter = 13.5 | Thickness = | Edge = Plain | Composition = (1839β1853) copper<br/>(1868) bronze | Years of Minting = 1839, 1851β1853, 1868 | Catalog Number = | Obverse = 1868 Quarter Farthing obverse.png | Obverse Design = [[Queen Victoria]] | Obverse Designer = [[William Wyon]] | Obverse Design Date = 1839 | Reverse = 1868 Quarter Farthing reverse.png | Reverse Design = [[St Edward's Crown|Crown]] and [[Tudor rose|rose]] | Reverse Design Date = 1839 }} The '''quarter farthing''' was a [[Coins of the pound sterling|British coin]] worth {{frac|1|3840}} of a [[Pound (currency)|pound]], {{frac|1|192}} of a [[Shilling (British coin)|shilling]], or {{frac||1|16}} of a [[Penny (British pre-decimal coin)|penny]]. The [[Royal Mint]] issued the coins in copper for exclusive use in [[British Ceylon]] in 1839, 1851, 1852, and 1853.<ref name="Peck415">{{Harvnb|Peck|1960|p=415}}</ref> The mint also produced bronze [[Proof coinage|proof]]s in 1868.<ref name="Peck416">{{Harvnb|Peck|1960|p=416}}</ref> The [[Obverse and reverse|obverse]] of the coins used [[William Wyon]]'s obverse die for the [[Royal Maundy#Maundy coinage|Maundy twopence]], bearing a left-facing portrait of Queen Victoria and the legend {{small|VICTORIA D: G: BRITANNIAR: REGINA F: D:}}.<ref name="Peck415"/> Wyon designed the [[Obverse and reverse|reverse]] to feature a [[St Edward's Crown|royal crown]] above the words {{small|QUARTER FARTHING}} and the date. Below the date, the coins featured a [[Tudor rose|heraldic rose]] with three leaves on either side.<ref name="Peck415"/> The coins were made of [[copper]], weighed 1.2 gramme, and had a diameter of 13.5 millimetres.<ref name="Peck415"/> The mint struck proof quarter farthings in bronze and copper-nickel in 1868, but did not issue any quarter farthings for circulation that year.<ref name="Peck416"/> While quarter farthings were never legal tender in the United Kingdom,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.royalmintmuseum.org.uk/journal/curators-corner/fractional-farthings/ |title=Fractional Farthings|year=2013 |publisher=Royal Mint Museum}}</ref> they are fractions of the British [[Farthing (British coin)|farthing]], which was currency in Ceylon, and traditionally have been catalogued as British coinage.<ref>{{Harvnb|Peck|1960|p=391}}</ref>
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