I think the bottom left (5 Ore) and top right (10 Ore) are from Denmark, but I can't read the dates
The one with the square hole (bottom, center) is a Chinese cash coin, but I know nothing else about it. The others are from Asia, but that's the best I can do. I'm not really into Asian countries' coins.
The one at the top left is a Japanese 10 cash coin. The date is 1941. The one at the center of the bottom is a Chinese coin. The date is somewehere between 1723 to 1735. Hope this helps.
Thank you for your help. You think the Chinese coin is from the 1700"s. If so, that is my oldest coin. Would you know what it might be worth or where I can do some research on it.
Yes, I know of the San Francisco Mint, but I didn't realize that coins for other countries were minted in US Mints. Thank you, I have learned something new today and that is always a good thing.
The Japanese coin in the upper left is a 10 sen. The Japanese date is Showa year 16. It's made of aluminum and in year 16 there are two weights, either1.5 gram or 1.2 gram. By year 18, there was only 1.0 grams in a 10 sen coin. I guess that's how tight it was getting any metal, even aluminum during the war years, that such small reductions were made.
Cathy
edited to say...I don't think this one was minted in San Francisco though!
<< <i>The one at the top left is a Japanese 10 cash coin. The date is 1941. >>
Actually, it's an aluminum 10 sen, dated Showa 16 (1941), either Y#61 (1.5g) or Y#61a (1.2g). "Cash" is a Chinese denomination which the Japanese never used. Their older coins which resemble Chinese cash coins are denominated "mon".
Krause and the Japanese Numismatic Dealers Assn. disagree quite a bit on the mintage of the lighter coin. Both list the same 575,600,00 for the 1940-41 mintage of the heavier one, but Krause claims 94.5-Billion for the 1941-42 mint output, while JNDA says it was only 944,900,000. (Of course, either way that's a lot of coins!)
Edited to correct my misreading of the weights. It's the 1943 Y#61b that's only a gram.
Perhaps they should come up with a mintatage of "lots and lots"! I don't have the Krause handy, but the JNDA gave the 1941 weights as 1.5 and 1.2 grams. Maybe another area of disagreement between the two? How about Lots and Lots and Real Light?
<< <i>You think the Chinese coin is from the 1700"s. If so, that is my oldest coin. Would you know what it might be worth or where I can do some research on it. >>
If you are an ANA member, borrow Fisher's Ding or Schjoth's Chinese Currency from their library. If not, check your local library and see if they have either one. Those are top English language resources on Chinese cash coins.
In general, there were so many millions of cash coins cast that very few of them have any significant value.
The Chinese cash coin is from the Qianlong reign (1736-1796) and minted by the Board of Revenue in Beijing.
The denomination of the Chinese coin is "wen." "Cash" is an English translation of that term. I don't know why English speakers didn't use"wen" instead. Wen is the same as "mon" in Japanese and "mun" in Korean.
Also, FYI, the Chinese "yuan," the Korean "won," and the Japanese "yen" are all derived from the same word meaning "round."
Comments
The one with the square hole (bottom, center) is a Chinese cash coin, but I know nothing else about it. The others are from Asia, but that's the best I can do. I'm not really into Asian countries' coins.
My OmniCoin Collection
My BankNoteBank Collection
Tom, formerly in Albuquerque, NM.
The one at the center of the bottom is a Chinese coin. The date is somewehere between 1723 to 1735. Hope this helps.
Y.C.
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My Coins For Sale
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I'm from Minneapolis, we're required to learn the names of all the Norwegian Kings in grade school!
Collecting:
Conder tokens
19th & 20th Century coins from Great Britain and the Realm
One of many coins the United States minted for other countries during WW2
Collecting:
Conder tokens
19th & 20th Century coins from Great Britain and the Realm
Mike
Cathy
edited to say...I don't think this one was minted in San Francisco though!
<< <i>The one at the top left is a Japanese 10 cash coin. The date is 1941. >>
Actually, it's an aluminum 10 sen, dated Showa 16 (1941), either Y#61 (1.5g) or Y#61a (1.2g). "Cash" is a Chinese denomination which the Japanese never used. Their older coins which resemble Chinese cash coins are denominated "mon".
Krause and the Japanese Numismatic Dealers Assn. disagree quite a bit on the mintage of the lighter coin. Both list the same 575,600,00 for the 1940-41 mintage of the heavier one, but Krause claims 94.5-Billion for the 1941-42 mint output, while JNDA says it was only 944,900,000. (Of course, either way that's a lot of coins!)
Edited to correct my misreading of the weights. It's the 1943 Y#61b that's only a gram.
Hi Roy!
Cathy
<< <i>You think the Chinese coin is from the 1700"s. If so, that is my oldest coin. Would you know what it might be worth or where I can do some research on it. >>
If you are an ANA member, borrow Fisher's Ding or Schjoth's Chinese Currency from their library. If not, check your local library and see if they have either one. Those are top English language resources on Chinese cash coins.
In general, there were so many millions of cash coins cast that very few of them have any significant value.
The denomination of the Chinese coin is "wen." "Cash" is an English translation of that term. I don't know why English speakers didn't use"wen" instead. Wen is the same as "mon" in Japanese and "mun" in Korean.
Also, FYI, the Chinese "yuan," the Korean "won," and the Japanese "yen" are all derived from the same word meaning "round."