Last edited by jlblonde; 09-11-2012 at 01:14 AM.
You cannot miss how the name of the country with all the titles etc is so long that it has to be divided or abbreviated.
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All gave some, some gave all - Remember The Heroes!
Here is one more coin you can have then only owned if you were a foreigner:
Notice how this coin didn't become a USSR/SSSR coin but stayed as RSFSR.
All gave some, some gave all - Remember The Heroes!
These 1924 Rubles are real stinkers to find this nice:
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All gave some, some gave all - Remember The Heroes!
And I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse: and He that sat upon him was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness he doth judge and make war.
Pyatachaka 1924:
Denezhka 1925:
Even though everybody knew this denomination as denezhka, or denga officially - on the USSR coin it is referred to as "half kopek".
All gave some, some gave all - Remember The Heroes!
Perhaps the hard money coins were minted as part of Lenin's NEP or New Economic Plan, which was a step back to blended Capitalism to transition to socialism in the near future:
This coin matches the standard of the Tsarist era silver coinage, ie .900 fine silver. But like the NEP, the coins in coin silver and .500 fine for smaller denominations went out the door when I V Stalin consolidated his power in late 1920's and early 1930's. By 1931 all silver and gold coins disappeared again, and the USSR led the world in the creation of a fiat currency, a precedent that even the Capitalist enemies of Socialism would follow over the next decades.
All gave some, some gave all - Remember The Heroes!
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