I remember how excited I was the first time I saw a coin from Sarawak because I had no idea where that is.
1851 Austria, Baden, Chile, Papal States and Switzerland. [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Double post. Stupid Wi-fi.
Here's Upper Canada, Lombardy, and Quebec. [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
I only have one for 1853[ATTACH]
I had this one in my possession briefly, but I was selling it for a family friend and couldn't afford to buy it myself. Great coin. [ATTACH]
1854. The French coin is an interesting "hobo" type. [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1855. [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Those are all great coins!
That's an awesome coin. It's amazing something that old exists in that condition.
Here's a 3 maravedis from the Spanish province of Navarre. [ATTACH]
I mean more harsh on their assessments. You have to keep in mind that there are all kinds of collectors. For collectors whose collection mostly...
I never even thought it might be Roman numerals. That's super hard to read.
I can never figure out where the year is on these coins. Where is it?
German coins from World War II are made of zinc. The ones in good condition are black but it turns white in time. I don't know if you can clean them.
1856. [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
These are way too new to have any value. Also, for whatever reason I've found there to be very little collector interest in Belgium in general.
The top middle is Libya.
Some of the people here are pretty harsh. The Liberian coin is a good coin. You won't retire on it but I'd have it in my collection. The South...
You have Bahrain, unsure (Algeria?), Thailaind. Second row: Bahrain, Serbia, Yugoslavia; third row: Thailand, Ethiopia, Kazakhstan.
Separate names with a comma.