Your statement is a contradiction. I find it hard to believe that you have an authentic copy of the Constitution. There are many copies of the Constitution, none of which are extremely valuable.
An authentic copy of the US Constitution would be nearly priceless. If someone were to find a copy of the US constitution, they could get virtually any price they asked at auction.
However much someone is willing to pay for it.
I'm assuming you mean an original, authentic copy. I'm not sure how much it would be worth; it's not something that changes hands very often (which is a bit of an understatement) and has ridiculous importance. It's probably easiest just to call it priceless.
A "copy" has no true numismatic value since it is not an authentic coin. I feel copies are a worthless addition to a collection.
yes we did copy the constitution
Certified copies are copies of documents that have been certified to be accurate copies of originals. This does not mean that the original document is certified to be authentic, only that the copy is genuinely a copy of the original document. This is somewhat like a notarized copy, which is notarized by a public notary to be an authentic copy of an original.
It means it's not real. Not authentic a fake
it was retouched in 1899
Authentic means something is not a copy, genuine, or real. Original means that it was the first or the one piece that was used to make copies from.
Very few authentic 1839 Gobrecht Dollars exist today. It's likely a copy of some type. Take it to a coin dealer for an idea of value.
worth of ceaae coin copy
An historical document specialist would be required to appraise a copy of the US Constitution. A good specialist could tell you how old the copy is and if it was made by hand or on a printing press.
No, a copy is not worth anything to a collector.