I love collecting our U.S. Coinage, but I dabble in World also....

What say you?
1- Currently I don't have an interest in World coins.
2 - I pick up a piece here and there, nothing serious.
3 - I enjoy collecting World coins along with U.S.
4 - (insert your comments).
1- Currently I don't have an interest in World coins.
2 - I pick up a piece here and there, nothing serious.
3 - I enjoy collecting World coins along with U.S.
4 - (insert your comments).
Persuing choice countermarked coinage on 2 reales.
Enjoyed numismatic conversations with Eric P. Newman, Dave Akers, Jules Reiver, David Davis, Russ Logan, John McCloskey, Kirk Gorman, W. David Perkins...
Enjoyed numismatic conversations with Eric P. Newman, Dave Akers, Jules Reiver, David Davis, Russ Logan, John McCloskey, Kirk Gorman, W. David Perkins...
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Comments
Have to add a coin to a coin thread and some of the world coins can also be considered "US" coins by history of production and use.
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CoinsAreFun Toned Silver Eagle Proof Album
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Gallery Mint Museum, Ron Landis& Joe Rust, The beginnings of the Golden Dollar
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More CoinsAreFun Pictorials NGC
Jeff
For me, there are way too many of world coins to learn about and try to collect.
But when I see one I like, I buy it.
Since our country is young, coins that are centuries old are interesting historically (and the price per year age is a lot cheaper than for US coins.)
Yep, I'm a #2
I can't stop enjoying early coinage just based on where they were minted.
History is history.
BST
a few US coins scattered among them
those who are laughed at always have the last laugh
There are some older foreign coins which are incredibly beautiful, rivaling such classic US coins as the St. Gaudens designs, Walking and Standing Liberty designs and early Draped Bust coins. I would be proud to include them in my collection.
Ancient coins are amazing and interesting. Not only can you hold in your hand something which has a tie back to the time of Caesar or Jesus (and earlier), but you can actually get a good history lesson by collecting and studying them.
I've yet to find an area of numismatics that doesn't hold some interest for me.
1694 Wurttemberg, Klippe 1/2 Ducat.
World Collection
British Collection
German States Collection
Shoe salesman. He didn't know HOW many ooins he had, but he knew his material by heart and knew if he needed a certain date and mintmark of a Centime or Mark or whatever.
Amazing.
And Mexican coins are of interest to me, too.
My YouTube Channel
<< <i>I love British!
And Mexican coins are of interest to me, too. >>
Very nice.
GB - now you are talking about history !
So does currency. Frightening, really.
What walks in, sometimes.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
My YouTube Channel
<< <i>I only collect World, with a few ancients thrown in.
1694 Wurttemberg, Klippe 1/2 Ducat.
Well you're never going to find a square coin with a horse on it issued by the US Mint.
Steve
The World is changing faster than we can appreciate. There are opportunities in World coins. At some point and may it happen sooner that many suspect, World rarities will reach parity with US rarities. The recent 1839 GB proof set auction result seems to confirm this.
Laugh if you want... but it is happening.
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
siliconvalleycoins.com
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
Enjoyed numismatic conversations with Eric P. Newman, Dave Akers, Jules Reiver, David Davis, Russ Logan, John McCloskey, Kirk Gorman, W. David Perkins...
About the earliest possible Scottish coin, from the reign of David I(1124-1153) whom is widely believed to have been the first Scottish monarch to issue coinage. This penny was minted in Berwick and is no doubt connected with the Scots capturing said town during the chaos of the first English Civil War.
Latin American Collection
<< <i>I started out collecting USA coinage and still collect it, lately early 20th century commemoratives or whatever catches my eye. But my main pursuit and where most of my spare dosh goes is Scottish:
About the earliest possible Scottish coin, from the reign of David I(1124-1153) whom is widely believed to have been the first Scottish monarch to issue coinage. This penny was minted in Berwick and is no doubt connected with the Scots capturing said town during the chaos of the first English Civil War. >>
Awesome rare coin! David was the son of Malcolm III Canmore, famous from Shakespeare's classic Macbeth.
When you start collecting world coins, you realize how rare some things are. Coins of David I are extremely rare and mostly found in museums. His son and grandson also issued coins, which are even more rare.
I have a Stewart type 2 cut half penny of Henry of Northumberland, David's son:
<< <i>
Awesome rare coin! David was the son of Malcolm III Canmore, famous from Shakespeare's classic Macbeth.
When you start collecting world coins, you realize how rare some things are. Coins of David I are extremely rare and mostly found in museums. His son and grandson also issued coins, which are even more rare.
I have a Stewart type 2 cut half penny of Henry of Northumberland, David's son:
As rare as the penny above is, the pennies of Henry of Northumberland are much scarcer. Northumberland was part of the English realm then, and Prince Henry had to swear fealty to the English monarch for his English lands in normal times, but with the English Civil War Prince Henry held a bit more sway over Northumberland than usual. So far I have a cut halfpenny that is likely a Prince Henry coin - but not the whole example. Several years ago I had the great fortune to purchase a small hoard of cut halves and farthings that were likely planted ca. 1270 or so and coins in there date from Henry I on up to Henry III and have a couple of Scots, a likely Danish piece etc.
<< <i>As rare as the penny above is, the pennies of Henry of Northumberland are much scarcer. Northumberland was part of the English realm then, and Prince Henry had to swear fealty to the English monarch for his English lands in normal times, but with the English Civil War Prince Henry held a bit more sway over Northumberland than usual. So far I have a cut halfpenny that is likely a Prince Henry coin - but not the whole example. Several years ago I had the great fortune to purchase a small hoard of cut halves and farthings that were likely planted ca. 1270 or so and coins in there date from Henry I on up to Henry III and have a couple of Scots, a likely Danish piece etc. >>
That sounds like a neat hoard to go through, great pieces. Even the damaged coins of this era are fascinating in their own respects- irregular flans, cut halfpennies and farthings (purposely cut for fractional currency, using the reverse cross as a guideline for cutting), poor strikes, double strikes, defaced dies, etc.
Half and half box of 20 full size image
--Severian the Lame
Not satisfied, he had himself proclaimed emperor of France and Italy in 1804. But the Russians did him in during military campaigns beginning in 1812, and Napoleon ultimately met his defeat at the hands of the Duke of Wellington and an allied Prussian army at the battle of Waterloo (in present-day Belgium) in 1815.
Below is a rare and highest grade from the Strasbourg mint.
I give away money. I collect money.
I don’t love money . I do love the Lord God.
Can you guess why the jewish woman is crying on the reverse?
I give away money. I collect money.
I don’t love money . I do love the Lord God.