man loses keys, finds 14th century coins

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by bkozak33, Jul 30, 2013.

  1. bkozak33

    bkozak33 Collector

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  3. non_cents

    non_cents Well-Known Member

    I'll need to lose my keys more often...
     
  4. Rickipedia

    Rickipedia Korean YN at 12

    Darn it, I don't have any keys, no car, no house key(it's electronic)
     
  5. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    oh man, that's cool. last time i lost my keys, the only thing i found was my keys...after 20 minutes and lots of profanity.:mad:
     
  6. bkozak33

    bkozak33 Collector

    how many people are going to sneak onto his property with metal detectors
     
  7. Windchild

    Windchild Punic YN, Shahanshah

    So much of this information is wrong...

    Also, the coin picture is either very bad or of a fake, as it looks copper [not dirt] and should be silver.


    This is an example of someone who doesn't know what they are talking about trying to be an expert.

    These coins are found with some frequency in England.

    Possibly correct, but (if I remember correctly) you CAN'T tell the difference between Pennies, half-Groats and Groats [if not more denominations] through pictures...

    A Groat would be Dollar size, a half-Groat nickel sized...


    Nope... just nope.
     
    PaddyB and Numismat like this.
  8. PaddyB

    PaddyB Eccentric enthusiast

    Interesting coin, awful article about it!

    Does appear to be a Henry VI groat, but I can't work out why the picture makes it appear copper. The coroner's inquest would have confirmed its authenticity so it must just be a bad picture. Coins like this are not uncommon over here - nor are most of the other things described in the article.

    I suspect the "expert" had opened the wrong orifice before starting to speak!
     
  9. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

  10. PaddyB

    PaddyB Eccentric enthusiast

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