Coins of 🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997)

Front side of 🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) 50 Cents 1977 coin
🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) Verified
50 Cents 1977
Front side of 🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) 10 Cents 1895 coin
🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) Verified
10 Cents 1895
Front side of 🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) 5 Cents 1895 coin
🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) Verified
5 Cents 1895
Front side of 🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) 5 Cents 1891 coin
🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) Verified
5 Cents 1891
Front side of 🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) 5 Cents 1901 coin
🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) Verified
5 Cents 1901
Front side of 🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) 1 Cent 1900 coin
🇭🇰 HONG KONG – Coins of the Crown Colony (1863–1997) Verified
1 Cent 1900
  • Colonial Era (1863–1941): Featured portraits of British monarchs (Victoria, Edward VII, George V), with denominations inscribed in both English and Chinese. Copper, bronze, silver, and nickel coins served everyday commerce.

  • Japanese Occupation (1941–1945): Regular coinage ceased during World War II, marking a break in Hong Kong’s monetary continuity.

  • Post-War Colonial Issues (1948–1997): Coinage resumed under George VI, then Elizabeth II, modernized with nickel-brass and cupro-nickel compositions, while retaining bilingual inscriptions.

Historical Insight:
Hong Kong coins are valued not only as currency but as witnesses to the city’s evolution from a 19th-century colonial port into a global financial hub. Collectors prize their mix of British royal iconography with Chinese characters—a numismatic bridge between two worlds.