John Betjeman photograph

John Betjeman

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Gender Male
Death40 years ago
Date of birth August 28,1906
Zodiac sign Virgo
Born London
United Kingdom
Date of died May 19,1984
DiedTrebetherick
United Kingdom
BuriedSt Enodoc Church, Trebetherick, United Kingdom
AlbumsLate Flowering Love
Betjeman's Banana Blush
Job Poet
Screenwriter
Broadcaster
Education Magdalen College
University of Oxford
Marlborough College
Movies/Shows Summoned by Bells
A Passion for Churches
Metro-Land
Railways for Ever
John Betjeman Goes by Train
Metro‑Land
Place of burialSt Enodoc Church, Trebetherick, United Kingdom
Spouse Penelope Chetwode
Children Candida Lycett Green
Son Paul
Paul Betjeman
Grandchildren Imogen Lycett Green
Endellion Lycett Green
John Lycett Green
Lucy Lycett Green
David Lycett Green
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID449844

John Betjeman: Collected Poems
Trains and Buttered Toast: Selected Radio Talks
Betjeman's England
The best of Betjeman
Lovely Bits of Old England: John Betjeman at The Telegraph
Tennis Whites and Teacakes
First and last loves
Slough
Ghastly Good Taste: Or, A Depressing Story of the Rise and Fall of English Architecture
Betjeman's Cornwall
nip in the air
A few late chrysanthemums
Church poems
Betjeman's Best British Churches
London's historic railway stations
Continual dew
Betjeman's Britain: Poems from the BBC Archives
Letters
Victorian and Edwardian London from old photographs
Illustrated Poems of John Betjeman
The Best Loved Poems of John Betjeman
The City of London Churches
A First Class Collection
An Oxford University Chest
Sweet Songs of Zion: Selected Radio Talks
Cornwall: A Shell Guide
A pictorial history of English architecture
A Ring of Bells: Poems
Collins pocket guide to English parish churches
Betjeman's London
Selected Poems
Victorian and Edwardian Cornwall from Old Photographs
Archie and the Strict Baptists
1926 to 1951
Letters: 1951 to 1984
English, Scottish and Welsh landscape
Slick but not streamlined
Mount Zion: Or In Touch with the Infinite
Still Sidmouth
English love poems
John Betjeman Letters
Coming Home
Betjeman in Miniature: Selected Poems of Sir John Betjeman
Victorian and Edwardian Oxford from Old Photographs
In praise of churches
John Betjeman: Coming Home : an Anthology of His Prose 1920-1977
Banana Blush
Betjeman: Poets for Pleasure
Betjeman Reads Betjeman
John Betjeman Collection
Summoned by Bells
Metro‑land
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John Betjeman Life story


Sir John Betjeman CBE was an English poet, writer, and broadcaster. He was Poet Laureate from 1972 until his death. He was a founding member of The Victorian Society and a passionate defender of Victorian architecture, helping to save St Pancras railway station from demolition.

King Charles 50p coins struck for the first time

Feb 16,2020 5:18 am

By Kevin PeacheyCost of living correspondent

Manufacturing has begun of The First coin to enter general circulation carrying The Image of King Charles .

The 50p coin has started to be struck at The Royal Mint in Llantrisant, Wales, and will enter tills, wallets and purses in December.

Sculptor Martin Jennings , who created The Portrait of The King , said that witnessing the coin being produced was a " quite remarkable experience".

He Said it took months of painstaking work to get The Image right.

He used pictures of King Charles on his 70th birthday to create a likeness of the monarch, in what is the smallest work he has ever had to produce.

" It has to be an exact portrait but also that says something about the lasting values of the institution he represents, " Mr Jennings said.

" In subtle and tiny ways, you can put these things across. "

Commemoration

King Charles 's portrait is The First coin design undertaken by Mr Jennings, but his public sculptures include poets John Betjeman , in St Pancras Station in London, and Philip Larkin in Hull.

The Reverse side of the coin is a copy of the design used on the 1953 Crown struck to commemorate The Queen 's coronation.

It includes The Four quarters of The Royal Arms depicted within a shield. In Between each shield is an emblem of the home nations: a rose, a thistle, a shamrock and a leek.

The 50p coins will be available for general use in December, distributed according to demand by banks, building societies and post offices. Eventually, 9. 6 million 50p coins of the latest design will be made. Other denominations will be manufactured, carrying The King 's image, In Line with demand.

They will co-circulate with coins featuring the late Queen, so those 27 billion coins will still be accepted in shops. Before decimalisation, it was common for people to carry coins featuring different monarchs in their pockets.

The coins will follow centuries of tradition of the monarch facing left - though King Charles 's predecessor faced right, bucking this trend.

As with previous British kings, and unlike The Queen , he wears no crown.

The coins are being struck at The Royal Mint 's site at Llantrisant where the official coin Maker - and Britain's oldest Company - moved to accommodate the decimalisation process in 1967. Visitors to The Mint 's museum will be able to see the manufacturing process and strike their own coin.

What is the Royal Mint ?

Kevin Clancy , director of The Royal Mint Museum, said: " For many people, this will be the First Time in their lives that they have seen a new monarch appear on money.

" It represents the biggest change to UK coinage since decimalisation and will usher in a new era where the coins of Queen Elizabeth Ii and King Charles III co-circulate in the UK. The new memorial 50 pence marks a moment in history and honours a landmark reign that lasted for 70 years. "

Questions still remain over the relevance of coins in the modern era as people increasingly turn to cards and smartphones to pay for things.

Cash use is forecast to drop, accounting for 6% of payments by 2031, according to the banking trade body Uk Finance .

The Mint says that coins still portray our national identity as well as having a practical function.

The buying power of coins is also being reduced by high levels of Inflation .



Source of news: bbc.com

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