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In 1696, England recalled every single silver coin in the country — and put Isaac Newton in charge. This is the story of the Great Recoinage, the biggest currency reset in English history. By the 1690s, coin clipping had become an epidemic. Ordinary people and professional criminals alike were shaving silver off the edges of shillings, crowns, and half-crowns — passing the degraded coins at full face value and pocketing the metal. Estimates suggest roughly 70% of England’s silver coins were significantly underweight. International trade ground to a halt, soldiers couldn’t be paid, and the economy teetered on the edge of collapse. King William III chose the most radical option available: a total coin recall. Every silver coin in the nation had to be surrendered, melted down, and reminted at the correct weight. The transition was brutal — riots, food shortages, and economic paralysis swept through England during the changeover. Then came the most unexpected figure in the story. Isaac Newton — yes, the scientist who described gravity and calculus — was appointed Warden of the Royal Mint. Far from treating it as a ceremonial role, Newton threw himself into the work with obsessive intensity: optimizing production, establishing branch mints, going undercover to build cases against counterfeiters, and sending criminals to the gallows. The new coins featured one elegant innovation — milled, ridged edges that made clipping instantly detectable. That tiny design choice was so effective that it survives on the coins in your pocket today, over 300 years later, even though they’re no longer made of precious metal. If you’re a history enthusiast, an economics nerd, or just someone who’s ever wondered why coins have ridged edges — this video is for you. #GreatRecoinage1696 #IsaacNewtonMint #CoinClippingHistory #MoneyOrigins #MonetaryReform ⚠️ While this video references widely documented historical accounts and figures, some details from the 1690s are subject to scholarly debate. Subscribe: / @moneyorigins-j8v