Old Coin I.D

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by brandi.fry, Apr 19, 2005.

  1. brandi.fry

    brandi.fry New Member

    My mom got this coin from my grandmother, and I have tried looking it up on the internet to see what kind it is, and from what year. I think it is from 1695, but if anyone has a clue, I would greatly appreciate it. Also, if anyone knows what it is worth, I am curious too! Here are some pictures of it!.
     

    Attached Files:

  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

    Welcome to the forum! But for some reason your pictures did not make it here ... Could you attach them again?

    Christian
     
  4. brandi.fry

    brandi.fry New Member

    Old Coin

    I am attaching the pictures again of a coin my Mom got from my grandmother. We would like to know where it came from, and maybe how much it is worth! IF anyone can help up us with this, we would greatly appreciate it!
     

    Attached Files:

  5. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Well I can tell you what it is supposed to be - an 8 skilling from Norway. But the designs of the obverse and reverse do not match any of the coins I cna find in the Krause catalog - neither does the date.

    So either it is an unlisted variety ( at least according to Krause ) - or it is a counterfeit.
     
  6. brandi.fry

    brandi.fry New Member

    I live in the DFW area, does anyone know of a place I can take the coin to for them to take a look at it?
     
  7. Aidan Work

    Aidan Work New Member

    GDJMSP,this coin is actually from Denmark,as the word,'Danske' is
    present in the legend.As to which King Frederik or King Christian whose reign it belongs to,I cannot tell.

    Aidan.
     
  8. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator


    Yes, I know. The very same word is also found on the coins of Norway from the time period. Check your Krause Aidan ( the designs for Denmark are entirely different ) - it's supposed to be a Norwegian coin. But that obverse and that reverse are not found on the same coin - they are found on different coins however. And there is no 8 skilling that I can find, with anything even close to those designs, minted in 1695.
     
  9. Aidan Work

    Aidan Work New Member

    Doug,does the coin in question have the crossed hammers mintmark? If it does,then it is definitely a coin struck at Kongsberg.Copenhagen mint coins usually have a heart (at least on the modern ones).

    Aidan.
     
  10. joesmom

    joesmom Member

    brandi...there are a great number of knowledgable folks on here that I'm sure will be able to help you figure out your mystery. However, I am also in the DFW area and will PM you the contact info of a couple of dealers here in our area as well.

    Good luck!

    Robin
     
  11. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator


    What ? :confused: Look at the pictures Aidan.
     
  12. Aidan Work

    Aidan Work New Member

    Doug,I haven't got a Krause to hand,as I am currently in an Internet cafe using a borrowed computer.

    Aidan.
     
  13. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Aidan - I meant for you to look at the pictures the OP posted. You can't make out whether there is a mint mark or not. But you can see the designs on the coin. And when you get to a Krause, and look at it, you will see that what I am saying is true. It is a Norwegian coin - or rather supposed to be.
     
  14. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

    That thingie below the "69" of the year is rather two hammers than a heart. So (while I don't know much about coins from those times) I would also say Norway :)

    Christian
     
  15. Bluegill

    Bluegill Senior Member

    Those first pics at the top look startlingly like some NASA photos I've seen. Does Krause mention anything about frigid methane seas or polar carbon dioxide frostfields? heh heh.
     
  16. coinandrew

    coinandrew Junior Member

    Hi.

    I am from MNorway, and this seems like a Norwegian 8 skilling.
    It seems like it has the hammers crossed mark on it, wich makes it 100% that it is from Norway.
    But I have not seen this type before, and the coin might be valuable and rare, as it is NOT listed anywhere.
    I would send a mail to kontakt@oslomynthandel.no to have them check this.
    If this a type not seen before, it will be worth a lot, as Norwegian old coins reaches all time high prices now a days.
    But if the mintmark is a heart (wich it seems NOT to be) it's a Dansih coin.

    Regards
    Oyvind
     
  17. Mikjo0

    Mikjo0 Numismatist

  18. coinandrew

    coinandrew Junior Member

    Solution found!

    Hi again.

    Talked with some experts and this is infact NOT a Norwegian coin but a Danish one.

    It is not the Kongsberg/Norway crossed hammers symbol on the coin, but something called "glodehaker" and it's used on some few Danish coins.

    It looks a lot like the Norwegian crossed hammers but if you take a closer look, it differs some from the crossed hammers.

    So, this is a Danish 8 skilling 1695, and unfortunaly not that very rare.
     
  19. Ian

    Ian Coin Collector

    Hi Doug,

    I don't know about you, but I find Krause very confusing when it comes to this period of Scandinavian coinage. I've come across a few pieces that have designs from one type apparently muled with designs from another. In fact i've come across more from that period in time that weren't in Krause than I have actually found IN Krause. They were all definitely `contemporaneous' with the Krause examples and I suspect genuine. Just not quite what Krause said they should be. I've never been sufficiently motivated to check out any books on Scandinavian coins however to determine exactly what / why / who / whatever. Truth is, maybe i've just got a bunch of counterfeits or maybe Krause has got a lot more work to do to get up to speed on early Scandinavian coinages. I personally suspect the latter but as ever, in the absence of reference i'm not 100% sure either way.

    Ian
     
  20. coinandrew

    coinandrew Junior Member

    Minted in Altona

    Hi.

    The "Glodehake" is the mintmark of Altona in Denmark, and looks like the Norwegian crossed hammers. But they do differ in shape, as the "glodehake" has a more sharp edge on it.
     
  21. julzboi661

    julzboi661 New Member

    Most Definately a coin from Norway (hammers mint mark), And possibly a fake.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page