Any ideas please

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by aacoins, Nov 18, 2005.

  1. aacoins

    aacoins New Member

    Tiny little silver coin
     

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  3. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Russian wire money. I believe the period was late 1500's to early 1600's. Sorry can't tell you which czar it is.
     
  4. Mikjo0

    Mikjo0 Numismatist

    I'm not sure if any other czars issued them but here is my wire kopek of Ivan the Terrible.I've read that he actually hated them and called for "those little bugs" to be recalled and melted down.
     

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  5. Bonedigger

    Bonedigger New Member

    :bow: :bow: :high5: :kewl: :thumb: :hail: Kiss :smile I think it's pretty cool!!!

    Bone
     
  6. quick dog

    quick dog New Member

    How would you like to have been the poor schmuck who minted ugly coins for Ivan? :hatch:
     
  7. Mikjo0

    Mikjo0 Numismatist

    Probably terrible!
     
  8. sema

    sema New Member

  9. Mikjo0

    Mikjo0 Numismatist

    Cool Sema,thanks for the link.Can you tell the date on mine? You must speak and read Russian.
     
  10. Aidan Work

    Aidan Work New Member

    Czar Mikhail I (or 'Michael' in English) (ruled 1613-45) issued wire
    Kopecks.They are nice little hammered coins.They depict the Czar mounted on horseback on the obverse & the title of the Czar is inscribed on the reverse.I have got one of these coins.

    Aidan.
     
  11. sema

    sema New Member

    to Mikjo0: the information on your holder is correct, but Ivan-the-Terrible's Denga=1/2Kopek type did not bear dates on it.

    to Aidan Work: this was a standard design for wire kopeks from early 1500s (Ivan 4 the Terrible) to early 1700s (Peter 1 the Great) - a horse rider with a spear on the obverse and the ruller's title on the reverse.
    half kopeks had horsemen with swords instead.

    fyi, the word "KOPEK" origins from the word "KOPJE" which in Russian means SPEAR
     
  12. karrlot

    karrlot Senior Member

    Why are they called "wire" coins?
     
  13. gxseries

    gxseries Coin Collector

    Simply because coins were struck on silver wires!!! Primitive but that's how it worked in the past. These were then cut up and hence the term "wire" coins.
     
  14. sema

    sema New Member

    It is very easy to keep the standard weight by cutting the pieces of the same length from silver wire of fixed diameter
     
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