Can anyone recognize this coin?

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by craazy786, Jun 18, 2008.

  1. craazy786

    craazy786 Junior Member

    Hello Everyone,

    My uncle gave me this coin but I can't tell where it's from or even what the writing on it is. Looks like it may be Arabic or Persian, but I'm not sure. He claims it's pretty old but I really can't tell.

    Anyone have any ideas??!?!

    Thanks!
     

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  3. De Orc

    De Orc Well-Known Member

    Anyone got any Idea guy's? all I can say is I like the look of it LOL
     
  4. spock1k

    spock1k King of Hearts

    it looks like a container to me thats shaped like a coin definitely middle eastern
     
  5. HAGOP

    HAGOP Member

    This isn't an arabic coin, it's persian.
    And there's not any date to define the time of it
     
  6. craazy786

    craazy786 Junior Member

    so no good ideas eh? what do you guys think my next move should be?
     
  7. Andrey5

    Andrey5 Member

  8. Darkfenix

    Darkfenix New Member

    yeah I'm gonna agree that I don't think its a coin but purhaps a token of some kind? other then that no idea:mad:
     
  9. JeromeLS

    JeromeLS Coin Fanatic

    That is not a coin-but it might be a coin weight.
     
  10. bommi

    bommi New Member

    hi

    hi,
    this looks like a token or container to keep some sniffing stuff/perfume like material?.
     
  11. craazy786

    craazy786 Junior Member

    I went to the site - couldn't find anything matching and I couldn't register for a new account to post anything...

    Don't know what to do... :mad:

     
  12. craazy786

    craazy786 Junior Member

    It's solid metal and heavy, it doesn't open up like a container would.


     
  13. craazy786

    craazy786 Junior Member

    What's a coin weight??

     
  14. JeromeLS

    JeromeLS Coin Fanatic

    Coin weights are peices of brass, copper or lead which were used to weigh gold coins before the existance of milled coinage to check that the coin was not underweight, clipped or counterfeit. They were made both by the state, and by private individual. They were made across Europe from the 13th to 18th centuries, but became redundant once milled coinage was widespread. They tend to be, like your peice, very thick. What does it weigh ?
     
  15. Andrey5

    Andrey5 Member

    To register you should click on the word Registered here http://www.zeno.ru/index.php and accept rules.
     
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