Assay office

Assay offices are institutions set up to assay (test the purity of) precious metals, in order to protect consumers. Upon successful completion of an assay, (i.e. if the metallurgical content is found to be equal or better than that claimed by the maker and it otherwise conforms to the prevailing law) the assay offices typically stamp a hallmark, punze, or poinçon on the item to certify its metallurgical content. Hallmarking first appeared in France, with the Goldsmiths' Statute of 1260 promulgated under Etienne Boileau, Provost of Paris, for King Louis IX.

US assay offices

Title 15, Chapter 8, Section 291 of the United States Code makes it unlawful to stamp goods in the United States with "United States assay" or any similar stamp which gives the impression that the item has been officially assayed by the United States government.

General overview and function of U.S. assay offices

Assay offices did and do exist in the U.S.,[1] but they are affiliated with the government's coinage mints and serve only the government's purposes in that field. They are not involved in hallmarking, as there has never been a hallmarking scheme in the U.S.

In the 1800s, the functions of assay offices in the U.S. included receiving bullion deposits from the public and from mining prospectors in the various American territories. The assay offices that still operate today function solely within national coining system (including bullion coinage for sales to investors).

US assay offices, current

Current U.S. assay offices include the following:[1]

US assay offices, historical

UK assay offices

General overview and function of UK assay offices

In the United Kingdom (UK), the Hallmarking Act 1973 makes it an offence to describe as platinum, gold or silver an item which is not hallmarked as appropriate or exempt from hallmarking. In July 2009, following a proposal by the British Hallmarking Council, an amendment to the Act also brought palladium under the hallmarking regime.[2]

The first UK Assay Office was Goldsmiths' Hall, founded around 1300, and where the term "hallmarking" originates, meaning "marked in Goldsmiths' Hall". Since then, there have been ten Assay Offices in the UK.

There are four remaining Assay Offices in the UK:[3]

Current assay offices

Historic assay offices

Irish assay office

General overview and function of the Irish assay office

The Irish assay system is based on that of the UK.

Current assay office

There is one assay office, the Dublin Assay Office in Dublin.

Dutch (Netherlands) assay office

General overview and function of the Dutch assay office

The Dutch (the Netherlands), who are members of the International Hallmarking Convention, have been striking hallmarks since at least 1814, and boast a 600-year history of hallmarking in Dutch territories. Like many other nations, the Dutch require the registration and use of Responsibility Marks since 1797. The Dutch also use a date letter code.

After the French defeat at Leipzig 1813 the History of the Netherlands was established. William VI, prince of Orange (known in Dutch as Willem Frederik), was proclaimed the sovereign. On March 15, 1815, with the support of the powers gathered at the Congress of Vienna, William proclaimed himself King William I of the Netherlands. He was also made grand duke of Luxembourg. The two countries remained separate despite sharing a common monarch. For our purposes, he retained much of the French legislation, including the precious metal guarantee law of November 9, 1787. On December 26, 1813 the precious metal laws were however, modified and the French hallmarks, the Gaul cockerels were replaced with Dutch lions. The existing guarantee offices were reopened after re-staffing and the production of the new hallmark dies. Willem abdicated in 1840. As of January 1, 1853 the out-of-date French guarantee law was replaced by a new Dutch law. This law of September 18, 1852, in a modified form (last modified in 1986 as the "Dutch Assay Law of 1986") is in still effective. As a result of the Benelux treaty the guarantee tax was abolished in 1953. At the same time gold and silver fineness standards were adapted to conform to international standards. Also the assaying of platinum was introduced in 1953.

In 1987, the assay system was privatized and since 1988 has been located in only an office at Gouda. The system is overseen by the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs which appointed Edelmetaal Waarborg Nederland B.V. as of March 11, 2002. In 1999, the Netherlands ratified the Vienna Convention on the Control of the Fineness and the Hallmarking of Precious Metal Objects.

Dutch hallmarks are recognized in Austria, France, Ireland, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom without further testing and have also been recognized in Belgium, Denmark, Finland and Sweden, which have voluntary hallmarking systems. All jewelry produced in the Netherlands or imported for the Dutch market must carry hallmarks.

Current assay office

There are two Dutch assay offices located in the city of Gouda and Joure. The Dutch recognize platinum, gold, silver and palladium as precious metals.

Historic Netherlands assay offices (up to 1988)

  • Amsterdam
  • The Hague
  • Groningen
  • Zwolle
  • Breda
  • Middleburg
  • Maastricht
  • Alkmaar
  • Utrecht
  • Rotterdam
  • Leeuwarden
  • Arnhem
  • Den Bosch
  • Schoonhoven
  • Roermond
  • Roosendaal
  • Joure

Swiss assay offices

General overview and function of Swiss assay offices

Only precious metal watch cases must be hallmarked in Switzerland. Swiss hallmarking for other articles such as jewelry and cutlery is optional. In addition to the Swiss hallmark, all precious metal goods may be stamped with the Common Control Mark of the Vienna Convention. Switzerland recognizes platinum, gold, silver and palladium as precious metals which may be hallmarked and thus are subject to assay.

Current Swiss assay offices

  • Basel/Bâle
  • Berne Central Bureau[4]
  • La Chaux-de-Fonds
  • Chiasso
  • Geneva (2 offices)
  • Le Noirmont
  • Schaffhausen
  • Zürich(2 offices)

Historic Swiss assay offices

  • Buchs
  • Delémont
  • Fleurier
  • Granges/Grenchen
  • St. Imier
  • Le Locle
  • Lausanne
  • Madretsch
  • Neuchâtel
  • Porrentruy
  • Romanshorn
  • Tramelan

Austrian assay office

There is one assay office at Vienna.

Cyprian assay office

There is one assay office at Aradippou. The Law governing the marking of precious metal articles has been ratified by the House of Representatives in 1991, creating a new semi-Governmental Organisation, the Cyprus Organisation for the Hallmarking of precious metals. The Cyprus Assay Office (CAO) is under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Tourism. The Cyprus Hallmark consists of three compulsory symbols: 1. The manufacturer's mark - Consists of the initials of the manufacturer of the article surrounded by a small shield; 2. The fineness mark - The purity of the metal, in parts per thousand; 3. The official mark - the Head of Aphrodite until December 2001 and a ship as from January 2002 denotes that the article is made of Gold, and the fish that the articles is made of Silver. The manufacturer's mark must be struck on the articles by the manufacturer before its submitted to the Assay Office for Hallmarking. The manufacturer may make arrangements for the manufacture's mark to be struck by the Assay Office upon submission of the article to be struck with the approved hallmarks. The manufacturer's mark which is registered under the relevant section of the Law shall include the initial letters of the name or names of the manufacturer and shall be of such design as may be approved by the Assay Office. The standards of fineness of Gold and Silver articles that are hallmarked are for gold : 375, 585, 750 and 916 parts per thousand; for silver: 800, 830 and 925 parts per thousand; no negative tolerance is permitted on the above standards of fineness.

The assay office of the Czech Republic

There is one assay office at Praha. Assay Office was established by the Czech National Council Law No. 19/1993 Coll., concerning the Administration Authorities of the Czech Republic in the Field of Hallmarking and Precious Metal Testing, from which the Assay Office competences and duties are resulting. The provision of the financing is included in the Law about Hallmarking and Precious Metal Testing (Hallmarking Act), No. 539/1992 Coll., and in the procedural Decree of the Federal Ministry of Economy (FME), No. 540/1992 Coll., according to which the Hallmarking Act is implemented.

Danish assay office

There is one assay office at Brondby.

Finnish assay office

There is one assay office at Espoo. The assay office is privatized and the concession was awarded to Inspecta Corporation is an independent, international qualification requirements fulfilling inspection, testing, measurement and certification services provider.

Hungarian assay office

There is one assay office at Budapest.

Latvian assay office

There is one assay office at Riga.

Lithuanian assay office

There is one assay office at Druskininkai.

Norwegian assay office

There is one assay office at St. Hanshaugen.

Polish assay offices

There are ten assay offices at:

  • Białystok
  • Bydgoszcz
  • Cracow
  • Chorzów
  • Częstochowa
  • Gdańsk
  • Łódź
  • Poznań
  • Warsaw
  • Wrocław

Polish Assay Offices test and mark precious metal alloy articles (gold, silver and platinum group metals). They also supervise compliance with Hallmarking Law at processing plants and precious metal alloy sales points. All Assay Offices must report to the Central Office of Measures.

Portuguese assay offices

There are two assay offices at

  • Lisboa
  • Porto

Slovakian assay offices

There are five assay offices at:

  • Bratislava
  • Kosice
  • Levice
  • Madretsch
  • Trencin

Swedish assay office

The Swedish assay office, the SP Technical Research Institute of Sweden, is in Borås. The assay office is privatized and the concession, given to the Inspecta Corporation, is an independent, international qualification requirements fulfilling inspection, testing, measurement and certification services provider. Inspecta is accredited by SWEDAC.[5]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 U.S. Treasury - Fact Sheet on the Mint and Other Coin Production Facilities of the U.S. Government
  2. News at the British Hallmarking Council
  3. The Goldsmiths' Company - The London Assay Office
  4. Adresses des bureaux du Contrôle fédéral des métaux précieux
  5. "Kontrollörer/Verifierare EU-ETS". www.swedac.se. SWEDAC. Retrieved 31 July 2015.

External links

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