While organizing my Russian coins into my coin books, I came across a coin I am unable to find in the Standard Catalog. I home some one can enlighten me. I hope the Photos attach. JonySky
I don't recognize it... and I tried running some of the cyrillic thru a translator and got nothing... However the crest resembles the Bulgarian crest. Its definetly not russian or serbian because bolth use the two headed eagle for state crest and have for a long time. From what I can tell, its probably Bulgarian because no other slavic country has a lion, the rest have eagles or horses or something like that.
10 stinkies Thank you sir! I did look at the Bulgaria symbol in the instant identifier pages, but they had the Commie version. I do appreciate the information. JonySky
Google is your friend, Use google to find a good slavic translator and google images to look up country crests. Being Slavic also helps too
This 10 Stotinki is from the reign of Tsar Ferdinand (1908-18). Yes,Bulgaria's monarch was called the Tsar.I prefer to use 'Czar' for the Russian monarch. Aidan.
What was the Ukrainian monarch called? Was he called the Hetman? I know that Hetman is derived from the German 'hauptmann',which means 'captain'. Aidan.
The way things get anglicised, I am surprised the silent character Ь at the end didn't prompt some wayward Englishman in the 17th century to spell ЦАРЬ as Tsarb or Czarb
Is that accurate? I always thought the difference between the two was an approximation of sound, common to Chinese-English spelling. Tao and Dao - because the true sound is really neither a T nor a D, or in this case neither a T nor really a C. Learn something new every day. edit - heh, I guess if I had read further in the thread I would have seen that issue has already been addressed... nevermind.