First National Lottery held 450 years ago
Last Updated: Thursday 15th July 2010, 13:37
The 16th century document, written by Queen Elizabeth I gives instructions for collecting money and asks that the prizes be entrusted to ‘persons of good faith’. Each ‘lot’ or lottery ticket cost ten shillings each but prizes were not necessarily cash.
The Lottery prizes were to be awarded in a combination of gold and merchandise, mainly comprising tapestries and fine fabrics. The £5,000 lottery jackpot prize is worth around £850,000 in today’s money, so prizes have risen a little since then and you are now guaranteed cold hard cash if you’re a lottery winner.
Unlike the weekly draws we have today, this lottery was held after three years of selling 400,000 lots, due to the logistics of selling money around the UK. This may be the reason the lottery was phased out but later draws in 1750 and 1826 were also run in the UK.
So while the National Lottery might be selling lottery tickets in its fifteenth year, this document, to be sold at auction this week shows that the UK has had lottery fever for a great deal longer than that!