Mine definately is the "Dukat" aka also known as the Zecchino/Italian States/ Ducato/Florin...I have 268 ex Here is my most recent one.... AV 4 Dukaten 1931 Belgrade Mint King Alexander I/ Sophia of Yugoslavia
Always knew there was "some reason" I liked you But I wouldn't include florin in the aka list, the florin is different coin - similar maybe but distinctly different. The florin originated as a means of one Italian city state being able to compete with the coinage of another Italian city state - namely Venice and their ducat which had allowed them to become the trade capital of the world at that time.
I have over 200 German 200 mark 1923A, all uncirculated. They are not gold, of course, merely aluminum, but there was a time long ago when aluminum was worth almost as much as gold. Now, if only I could manage time travel and swap that aluminum for gold. My most common gold coin is the sovereign. Not sure how many I have without looking it up in my inventory file.
Most of my coins are round. These days I do not buy much anyway. Mostly euro circulation (and commemorative €2) coins, with the occasional icing on the cake: a little older and/or from the non-euro neighborhood. Does of course not mean I would be interested in those only ... Christian
It makes a lot of sense to collect pennies though. They have been around for over a thousand years from many countries and are a fascinating topic. The US pennies are a mere newcomer to the scene.
I have about 700 90% silver US Washington Quarters (300 from 1964 alone) that I pulled from circulation back in the mid 1960s, as they were disappearing from circulation.
I had not thought of this, so I have done a bit of counting. Most of my coins are British so those are the only ones I have counted, and these are mainland British not Commonwealth or colonial. Count is for distinctly different coins - some duplicate dates but only when there are recognised variations. Biggest scorers: Shillings: 236 back to 1551, Halfpennies: 193 back to ~1390 Farthings: 182 back to 1672 Pennies: 164 back to ~850 AD Sixpences and threepences probably come next but I haven't bothered to count those yet!
I am all about Chinese Cash, but I have a couple pieces of EIC cash as well, so I guess they all count.