World coins ID help

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by stainless, Mar 6, 2009.

  1. stainless

    stainless ANTONINIVS

    I bought all these for a total of $2.

    is there anything of value here, and what are they? lol. I think the chinese one might be old.







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    stainless
     
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  3. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

    the chinese one might be worth lttile something but idk. cool pick up though :)
     
  4. hontonai

    hontonai Registered Contrarian

    The only one I feel competent to comment on is fourth from the left in the bottom row:

    Meiji 16 (1941) aluminum 10 sen, either
    • Y#61, 1.2g, combined 1940-41 mintage of 575,600,000, or
    • Y#61a, 1g, combined 1941-42 mintage 94,494,700,000 according to Krause but combined 1941-43 mintage of "only" 944,900,000 according to the JNDA catalog.
    (I place more trust in the JNDA than in Krause.)

    The planchet of #61a is noticeably thinner than that of #61, but even without a thick planchet version to compare it with, it shouldn't be too hard to ID if you have a good scale. Even in wartime the Japan Mint did a very good job of meeting specs.

    At an average price of 8-1/3¢ I think you did all right.
     
  5. manymore

    manymore Chinese Charms

    The Chinese cash coin (first row, first coin from left) is a Qian Long Tong Bao cast at the Board of Works during the reign of Emperor Gao Zong (1736-1795).

    Gary
     
  6. stainless

    stainless ANTONINIVS


    ah, thanks :)

    cast as in fake? or is it a real coin.


    stainless
     
  7. manymore

    manymore Chinese Charms

    The coin is real.

    By "cast", I was referring to the method used to produce the coin.

    Gary
     
  8. stainless

    stainless ANTONINIVS

    ah k, thanks for the help all :)


    stainless
     
  9. weryon

    weryon World traveler - In Thailand

    nice find, congratz !
     
  10. Vince

    Vince Member

    I can ID two of the coins for you:

    The last coin on the top row is a 1947 English Shilling (the mint also produced a Scottish shilling with the lion facing). 1947 is significant historically as it is the first year when there was no silver content in British "silver coins". The coin is made of cupro-nickle. Unfortunately it does mean that the intrinsic value is not there, but it is still an interesting coin to own. The king is George VI

    The third coin down in the first column is a 1961 florin (2 shillings). The queen is Elizabeth II who is the daughter of George VI.

    $2 for that little lot is a real bargain. Nice buying.
     
  11. bart

    bart Senior Member

    1st row:
    1) Chinese cash
    2) Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) 25 cents
    3) Iran 2 rials
    4) Turkey, Ottoman, 10 para (accession year 1277AH = 1861AD)
    5) Mexico 20 centavos
    6) Great-Britain shilling (English crest)
    2nd row:
    1) Greece 2 drachmes
    2) token
    3) Israel 1 agora
    4) Greece 5 drachmai
    5) Netherlands 10 cent zinc
    6) token
    3rd row:
    1) Great Britain 2 shillings (= 1 florin)
    2) China-Taiwan 1 yuan FAO-issue
    3) Greece 10 lepta (100 lepta = 1 drachma)
    4) token
    5) Italy-kingdom 20 centesimi
    6) token
    4th row
    1) Norway 50 ore
    2) Singapore 20 cents
    3) Sweden 2 ore
    4) Japan 10 sen
    5) Spain 5 pesetas
    6) France / Chambres de Commerce 1 franc

    They are all common coins, but a very nice mix. 2 $ for all is like getting them for free.
    Well done!!
     
  12. stainless

    stainless ANTONINIVS


    Awesome. thanks a bunch for the list Bart :)


    stainless
     
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