US price levels, 1800–2000Red line marks leaving silver standardA bronze coin of the Chinese Han Dynasty—circa 1st century BC. Some modern Japanese coins still have the characteristic hole in the coin.An ancient Greek coin, struck under Roman rule, circa 268 AD.British fifty pence coin
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Errors

A coin is usually a piece of hard material, generally metal and usually in the shape of a disc, which is issued by a government to be used as a form of money. Along with banknotes, coins make up the cash forms of all modern money systems. more...

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Coins are usually used for lower-valued units, and banknotes are usually used for the higher values; also, in most money systems, the highest value coin is worth less than the lowest-value note.

Collecting coins

See Coin collecting and Numismatics for more information on the collecting of coins, bank notes, token coins and Exonumia.

The value of a coin

The market exchange value of a coin comes from its historic value, and/or the intrinsic value of the component metal (for example gold coins, silver coins or platinum coins).

However, in modern times, most coins are made of a base metal and their value comes strictly from their status as fiat money. This means that the value of the coin is decreed by government fiat rather than agreed by the people, which really makes it less a coin and more a token in the strictest sense.

To distinguish between these two types of coins, as well as from other forms of tokens which have been used as money, monetary scholars have defined three criteria that an object must meet to be a "true coin". These criteria are:

It must be made of a valuable material, and trade for close to the market value of that material.; It must be of a standardized weight and purity.; It must be marked to identify the authority that guarantees the content.;

By the above definition, the invention and first known usage of coins comes from the Kingdom of Lydia circa 643-630 B.C. Under three generations of Lydian kings, the money of Lydia gradually moved from being lumps of electrum (a naturally occurring alloy of silver and gold) to coins of a guaranteed weight and purity, marked with the seal of the King. True coins also developed very close to this time frame in both India and China.

In 1979 and 1980, a Chinese architectural team excavating the region surrounding the ancient kingdom of Loulan discovered some Mesolithic stone tools and coins (see Loulan: Modern Chinese Expeditions).

Coin debasement

Throughout history, governments have been known to create more coinage than their supply of precious metals would allow. By replacing some fraction of a coin's precious metal content with a base metal (often copper or nickel), the intrinsic value of each individual coin was reduced (thereby "debasing" their money), allowing the coining authority to produce more coins than would otherwise be possible. Debasement of money almost always leads to price inflation unless price controls are also instituted by the governing authority. Some consider a classic example of this phenomenon to be the behavior of price levels in the United States since 1964 (the last year circulating United States Coins were minted of 90 percent silver). Such debasement and inflation were not unique to the U.S. Virtually every other country debased their coinage too. The United Kingdom and other countries saw similar inflation during the same era. Furthermore, the silver coinage current in the first half of the 20th century was not necessarily "true coinage" by the definition above. For example, in 1960, the silver in a U.S. dime was worth less than four cents. Many countries have redenominated their currency as a means of making a currency system impacted by inflation more practical. A recent, but extreme example of this is Turkey, which redenominated its currency on January 1st, 2005. One new Turkish Lira is worth one million of the old Turkish Lira.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


1997-D U.S. Quarter Off Center Broadstruck Error! $4.99 Belgium 2 Euro 2006 "Atomium" Rotated Die 160°+/- $19.99
Ireland 5P Struck on India 2 Paise Plan. Anacs Ms-62 $61.00 1980 Ireland 10P Struck on Foreign Planchet Ngc Ms-64 $39.00
Syria 1000 Syrian Pounds Error Signature Replaced See S $99.99 Error, Ukraine, 2 kopiikas 2007 inverted $9.99
Nepal 2003 Royal Crown 25 Paisa Error n Normal 2 Coins $24.99 1861 Gold Dollar Unc Die Clash $22.50
Mexico 1 Peso 1903 MoAm, Error Coin, Lrg Lamination Xf! $9.99 Error Italy incorrect year, one digit is missing 955 $8.99
Germany 2 Euro 2006 J " Holstentor" Off-Center Core $79.99 Double Struck Silver Guitar Coin-Must See $1.25
Great French Lion Mirror Brockage $36.00 1720 Germany Mirror Brockage Obverse $17.50
John Adams rare proof error coin misaligned strike $2,399.00 Error: 1992-Uk Ecu Pattern I Ecu 75% Oc/ Chain Strike $135.00
Error: 1992-Uk 1 Ecu double struck/ P. Brockage $150.00 Argentina 1 P "Provingias" Spell Error 95 Bimetal Coin $12.99
1974 Philippines 5C Ngc Ms-65 Off-Center Error Gem Bu!! $9.35 1972 Philippines 25c Ngc Ms-63 Mint Error 25% Off-Cntr $9.35
1920 Belgium 5 Centimes Over Date Ovd 1920/10!! $4.99 1972 Philippines 10c Ngc Ms-65 Error 20% Off Gem Bu!! $9.35
1950 Paraguay 1 Centimo Tripled Die Reverse (Tdr)! Wow! $7.50 196X Philippines 1c Ngc Ms-62 Mint Error 40% Off-Center $9.35
3 Mexico Errors - Lamination, Rim Cud, & Filled Die!!! $19.99 1967 Philippines 10c Ngc Ms-62 Mint Error 75% Off-Cntr $9.35
1929 Belgium 10 Centimes Repunched Date / Rpd 1929/29!! $4.99 Error - 1962 Belgium 1 Franc Doubled Die Obverse! Cool! $3.24
1903 Large H Five Cents Rare Error Coin $49.99 Colombia 1971 - Double Error - Double Die + Die Break $9.95
1979 Canadian Cent Struck On New Zealand Cent Planchet $49.99 Colombia 1974 - Double Date Error - Bu $1.99
Peru 1/2 Real Overdate 1858 Over 1868 - Km-177 In Xf/Au $14.95 Mexican Error Coin 1969! Five Centavos $4.99
1881 Mexico Silver Circulated Fifty Centavos (error) $14.99 Error: Very Deep dish 1999 Broadstruck Cent plus $50.00
Xrare Struck Thru Cloth 1938 Iraq 10 Fils 600,000 Made $34.99 25 Cent Piece Missing Reeds Canadian (Wow) $9.99
Rare New Zealand Threepence Full Set including 1935 3p $500.00 Once in a Lifetime Huge error Collection *Last Listing* $70,000.00
Russia. 1797-Em. 2 Kopeks. Off-center error. Km 95.3 Ef $56.00 Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 92 (2005) Nederland $55.00
Rare Uk Mint Error 2 P on small flan - Unc and nice $49.00 East Africa 10 Cents 1964 Double Centre hole (K819) $6.50
So Rare 1850 1 Baiocco Stamp Wedging Frappe Emanuele Ii $49.99 5 Pounds Old Foreign Money Coins W Silver Gold Coins $429.00
Cordoba Argentina Error 1 Real 1843 Date 3481 Rrr $120.00
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Prices current as of last update, 11/20/08 5:30am.


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