4500
Mint Condition, I'd say priceless
You are asking about a 1 Centesimo coin from Panama (KM#22). The coin is 19.05mm in diameter, weighs 3.1 grams and is made of Bronze. The obverse (front) has a bust of Urraca (an indigenous Panamanian chieftain who fought against the Spanish conquistadors) with his name above. The reverse (back) has the denomination ("UN CENTESIMO", which is Spanish for "One Centesimo" - there are 100 Centesimos to the Balboa) with an arc of 9 stars above it and two sprigs of leaves below - above the stars are the words "REPUBLICA DE PANAMA" (Spanish for "Republic of Panama") and below the leaves is the date "1968". There were 25,000,000 of these coins produced for circulation in 1968, and another 23,000 in Proof for collectors. According to the Standard Catalog of World Coins, an example is worth US$0.25 in Very Fine condition, US$0.50 in Extremely Fine condition, US$2.00 in Uncirculated condition, US$3.00 in Brilliant Uncirculated condition, and US$3.00 in Proof condition.
"A cent" or "one-hundredth" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase un centesimo.Specifically, the masculine indefinite article un means "a, one." The masculine noun centesimo means "cent, hundredth, penny." The pronunciation is "oon tchehn-TEH-see-moh."
A portrait of Urracá, a cacique (or native chieftain) who fought against the Spanish conquistadors, appears on the Panamanian One Centesimo coin.
lol im wasting the answer ahahahahahhahaha but i have the same coin
yes mine has all that on it
Face value of a 1 centesimo coin from Panama is 1/100 of a colon, a fraction of a US cent. In circulated condition, it has little value; in uncirculated condition, it's worth maybe a quarter.
"I don't have a penny." = Non ho un centesimo.(nohn oh oon chen-tez-ee-moh)
Un sol was created on 1982-01-21.
Perez de Cuellar was a Peruvian diplomat and secretary general in UN between 1982-1991.
Un oiseau sur le quai - 1982 is rated/received certificates of: Belgium:KT
Centesimo is an Italian equivalent of the English word "cent."Specifically, the word is a masculine noun. It may be preceded by the definite article il ("the") or the indefinite un ("a, one"). The pronunciation is "tchehn-TEH-see-moh."