what does becker on continental coin mean
Gordon C. Kumpikevicius has written: 'City fortifications as Roman coin types' -- subject(s): Catalogs, Coin collections, Coins, Roman, Fortification, Roman, In art, Private collections, Roman Coins, Roman Fortification
a coin? not a coin....
A coin.
me: its a riddle and the answer is a coin u: thx
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No, a genuine Continental currency coin would not have the word "copy" on it. If a coin has "copy" marked on it, it is likely a replica or counterfeit coin. Authentic Continental currency coins were issued during the American Revolution and did not include such markings.
if it is a real one its worth about $90,000-100,000.but beware alot of fakes out there.also is it the coin or paper currency big difference.best bet is to go to a coin specialist.
No set values for replicas exist, it's worth what you can get.
Some continental coins were made of pewter, others of bronze or silver. The 1776 "continental currency" (dollar) is one of the rarest US coins and many were made from pewter, consequently suffering from corrosion of the tin.
Partly it was issued on paper with no real way to convert it to coin, partly it was easy to counterfeit.
Weight: 15.03-18.51 grams, it varies.
In Barbados, the coin currency is comprised of the Barbadian dollar coin. The rest of the currency is all paper.
Authentic examples of the 1776 Continental Currency dollar are very rare, 7 different varieties are known. To find a picture of a real one, use the search box on your browser and type in 1776 Continental Dollar and click on images. This should bring up pictures of authentic examples.
Here is what the Red Book, the definitive US coin catalog, says about your coin: worn: $7,000 US dollars catalog value average circulated: $21,000 well preserved: $50,000 and more
8-13-11>>> Authentic examples of the 1776 Continental Currency dollar are very rare, 7 different varieties are known. Values start at $10,000.00 and go over $100,000.00 and more depending on type and grade.NOTE: Many replicas, copy's and counterfeits exist.
The originals and official restrikes were all struck, not cast or molded. But be nice. Call it a reproduction, not a fake.
It is not US currency. It's probably a Canadian or English coin.