Googled "oldest coin in the world"

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Tyler Graton, May 15, 2017.

  1. Tyler Graton

    Tyler Graton Well-Known Member

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  3. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Interesting.. I also like the Featured Coin links on the bottom of the page.
    (you can create 10 other threads with those also ;))
     
  4. Tyler Graton

    Tyler Graton Well-Known Member

    You should read the buffalo coin one. 50 dollar 24 carrot gold buffalo. I hope someone's out there that's nice enough to spend it as face value XD
     
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  5. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    True! That would be nice!
    carrot.jpg
     
  6. Tyler Graton

    Tyler Graton Well-Known Member

    Hahahaha why am I counting carrots?!?! That's a good one lol I shoulda knew that would be 24
     
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  7. sakata

    sakata Devil's Advocate

    Edit because of error in statement.
     
    Last edited: May 15, 2017
  8. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    Allegedly the oldest coin, because China and India started minting coinage at roughly the same time period. No one can say for sure who struck the first coin, though my money would be on the Chinese as they had a history of making coin-like charms for thousands of years already prior to 700 BCE.

    Even the article doesn't say this is the oldest coin, but one of the oldest. A very subtle but important distinction.
     
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  9. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    :)..you're a natural @ what you do big O
     
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  10. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Though few are even aware of it the Chinese were even producing currency (bank notes) as early as 118 BC. And as mentioned, they were producing coins long, long before that.

    But, whenever you Google a question like what is the oldest coin, the coins of Lydia will be what comes up. That's because most of the books written on the subject say that Lydia was the first producer of coins. However the books are wrong, as many books are.
     
  11. Coinman1974

    Coinman1974 Research, Research, Research

    I did the same thing....:banghead:
     
  12. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    i have spades, knives and even very old shells that were used as money, but i hesitate to call them what we term "coins". now this may be the old "you say tomato"(political correctness) thang, but when in Rome....(do as the Chinese do:woot:)
     
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  13. Dickinak

    Dickinak New Member

    Another interesting article on the Lydia Lion:
    http://oldestcoins.reidgold.com/article.html

    Alyattes, king of Lydia, was my great x something grandfather. I descend from Alyattes, on my mother's side, through Comfort Bigelow, my great x 6 grandmother. She was born September 23, 1707, in Marlboro, Mass. That's assuming they have the genealogy correct, and when you get back that far you never know for sure. I have found over 300 kings that I descend from so far, and I'm trying to get some of their coins. I collected large cents and Indian head cents as a teenager and genealogy has gotten me back into coins 50 years later.
     
  14. dadams

    dadams Well-Known Member

  15. norenxaq

    norenxaq Active Member

    chinese coins began, according to some, around 1000 bc. indian coins began around 600 bc
     
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