I guess it's time for 1719 already? 1719 -- UK farthing: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1720 -- UK 1/2 penny: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1721 -- Salzburg, 4 kreuzer: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1722 -- Pfalz Electoral Pfalz, 20 kreuzer: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Apparently, these 1723 coins are very common. Shilling: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1724 -- Pfalz Electoral Pfalz, 20 kreuzer: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1726 -- Spain, 1 real: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1727 -- Hamburg, 4 schilling: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
We've seen the UK 3 pence and 4 pence, so here's the 1729 UK 2 pence: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1730 -- UK , 1/2 penny: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1731 -- United Kingdom, 1 farthing: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1732 -- Netherlands (Holland) East Indies, 1 duit: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1734 -- Portugal, 10 reis: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
2009 -- William Harrison: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
I think it's called the "Wildman", from European mythology of the middle ages.
1735 -- Brunswick-Luneburg-Calenberg-Hannover, 1/6 thaler: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
US, 10dollars, 1912: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
1736 -- Russia, 1 polushka: [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
The bright fields and dark devices are caused by axial lighting, using a 50% transmission "plate beamsplitter" from Edmund Optics.
We should be able to get back to 1498, with no delays. I seem to recall someone mentioning that they had 1497, so the first year this thread...
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