Old Bottle of Coins

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Mkm5, Dec 31, 2020.

  1. Mkm5

    Mkm5 Well-Known Member

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  3. serdogthehound

    serdogthehound Well-Known Member

  4. Mkm5

    Mkm5 Well-Known Member

    Interesting! Thank you for the info.
     
  5. cwtokenman

    cwtokenman Coin Hoarder

    The token in the 8th photo is a Broas Brothers Civil War token. I hope you didn't roll that one up and cash it in!
     
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  6. VistaCruiser69

    VistaCruiser69 Well-Known Member

    I like the Yen. The 500 Yen is that of the 1982 - 1999 style coin. I recognize the 1 yen, 100 yen, 50 yen, 5 yen and 500 yen coins. Spent many of those during my years living in Japan. 100 yen at one time was in paper currency, a long time ago. There wasn't that much use for the 1 yen coin until the Emperor died in 89'. Right after he died, they began charging tax when purchasing items. In the very beginning, it was 1 yen tax per 100 yen spent. Last I remember, which was a long time ago, it went up to 3 yen tax per 100 yen spent. So those 1 yenners eventually became more relevant over the years. I lived in Japan from 86' to 91'. The highest the yen rate was while I was there was 186 yen to the dollar. With that rate, you can image how little 1 yen was. Like nearly half a US cent for one. Not anymore though.
     
    Last edited: Jan 11, 2021
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  7. xCoin-Hoarder'92x

    xCoin-Hoarder'92x Storm Tracker

    The French ones are cool but unfortunately not silver (.999 nickel), and pretty common. The 500 Yen and 2 Francs (Swiss) are the most valuable coins in the pile
    I'd say. No numismatic value as those two are currently spendable in their nations.

    I used to have hundreds of the large UK pennies and sold those for an average of 25 cents a piece.

    They are cool as I love world coins. But that particular pile I'd keep.
     
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