Reproductions and replicas rarely have a lot of collector value, unless they're made of a precious metal like silver or gold. The vast majority are made of some much less expensive alloy, but without more information on your item it's not possible to give any further details.
Reproduction pewter $ 7.50 US
The only reference I can find to a Claudius II Gothicus coin in a British coin catalogue has this description - Possibly a silver coin with IOVI STATORI on the obverse. It may fetch anything from £8 to £20 GBP. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
This is NOT a real coin. It's a reproduction that has no numismatic collectible value. It's value is just what someone will pay for it.
Three-Sided Coin was created on 2002-06-11.
It depends on what it is made out of. Reproduction and fantasy coins are only worth the worth of the metals used to make the coins, for example, if that coin contained 1 troy ounce of pure silver, that coin would be worth $29.23, however, if the coin was lead or pewter it wouldn't be worth more than a penny or two. Reproduction coins have no set composition and can be made out of anything from precious metals to the cheapest metals found. The coin itself has no value, any value comes from the metal content.
The value is very little or nothing. Reproductions have no numismatic value. Please note that the Confederate States of America never made any gold coins.
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.
it is a ten sided hexegon
No U.S. one dollar coins were issued in 1779, the first was in 1794. The piece is likely a reproduction of a Post-Colonial issue of some type. Take it to a coin dealer for an assessment
No U.S. one dollar coins were issued in 1779, the first was in 1794. The piece is likely a reproduction of a Post-Colonial issue of some type. Take it to a coin dealer for an assessment.
It is a heptagon (7 sided).
The name is Carolus- Spanish for Charles. Value will depend on condition, and we can't judge that over the internet, You need to take the coin to a coin dealer. IF it is original, value can vary from about $50-$350. HOWEVER- there is a modern Chinese reproduction that is a copper cored coin, worth about a dollar.