The Oceania 10 shilling is the least common of that series. It would not be described as rare. The pound note is more available than the 10...
10s are the most common. Expect 30-40 each if sold separately over time. Most of the price in the Heritage auction went for the 50. I've...
These were issued and used at a fair put on by the 90th Division in Berncastel Germany in 1919. They were not general issue notes that were used...
I don't know where this came from but it is wrong. First, any given number can appear 312 times. 12 fed letters X 26 suffix letters. Notes are...
The MRI Bankers Guide is a printed work that is used by banks for current banknotes. There is no online version. It is expensive but you can...
I have the 1, 3 and 5 million mark from this series. All of them are perforated. The perforations are the letters P, R, O and B. No idea what...
The German hyperinflation period is 1922-23, not WWII.
Even with a high resolution scan it would likely be impossible to authenticate from a computer image.
I have seen enough misattributions and other problems with the main US TPG grading companies when it comes to non-US notes that I would not trust...
You do not specify a country of origin for the notgeld you are referencing. The Keller catalogs have numbers for German notgeld. There is a...
I usually look to www.tieste.de for prices of German notes.
A million US $ that is legal tender? The answer is no.
The Rosenberg book has been through many editions since 1976. You should be able to find a more recent edition for cheap. It has more detail...
The English revenue stamp is dated 1908. My guess is that it passed through the original purchasers estate at that time. Revenue stamps would...
This is listed as X166B in the Hessler book. It is the registered version of the 4%Loan of 1907. US Bonds are identified by their date of...
There is no listing in Hessler for this type.
While I agree with the above comment about free shipping in principle, the seller who only spends 49 cents on shipping risks damage to the...
I suspect it is a chopmark.
Those are all from Austria denominated in heller. The last two in the first picture used to be listed in the specialized Pick catalog.
Most of the not geld from Bielefeld had political or anti-Semitic themes.
Separate names with a comma.