Wow! Look at the plate numbers!
Here is a list of values for it, as well as where it’s from....
I’d say it’s a SB 2012, so the ruler is Alexius III (1195-1203).
Too much table, in my opinion. Then again, this was one of the first photos I ever had taken of any single coin I had, period.
Here are my bad early photographs of my example. I believe I paid $35 for it.[ATTACH][ATTACH]
It’s a 5 kopeks from the Ekaterinburg mint minted in 1784. Checking the NGC price guide, it says $25 for F. I’d say $20 is fine. Ultimately, if...
Hey, that’s more than I have. I guess that’s what you can afford when you actually have an income. The link should be in his signature.
Feel better soon! I can let you come to your own conclusions on the price. Your Constantine IX is a later one, struck from 1049-1053.
After quickly checking CNG, it seems that Michael VII mostly sells for around $300. Some sell for more, some less, but that seems to be a median.
Neat!
Michael VI reigned for a year. Michael VII reigned for seven, but he also had increasingly poor gold content in his coins, allowing him to strike...
@kevin McGonigal Here is an article on it. http://www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n31a19.html Q. David Bowers also wrote about in one of the books I have.
The twopence is also two full ounces of copper, while the penny is only one ounce.
Here is a twopence with the same design, in case you wanted to see a complete one. [ATTACH][ATTACH]
Here is my favorite tuppence, bar none.[ATTACH] [ATTACH]
I’m assuming it’s from the Nicobar. That in itself is interesting to me. There was one 4 Daler I liked, but I never purchased it.
I’m inclined to think it’s William II due to spacing, but I can’t say for sure.
The other one appears to be a token naming William I (or II). It reads: WILLIAM I (or II) KING OF ENGLAND AND DUKE OF NORMANDY. Probably...
After seeing one in person, they are a lot thinner than I expected. However, that does not cross them off my want list.
That is really neat!
Separate names with a comma.