It was an artistic decision based on the choice of painting or engraving used as the model for each bill. There's no right or wrong, forwards or reverse, just different.
The same statement applies to coins. The decision to face the portrait in a particular direction is purely arbitrary.
The first woman to appear on US paper currency was Pocahontas, who appeared on the reverse of a an $20 National Bank Note issued in 1865. Martha Washington was the only other woman to appear on paper money. Her portrait was used on $1 silver certificates that were issued from 1886 to 1896.
B.C. stands for Before Christ. B.C., numbers up become smaller. The counting goes in reverse.
There was a temporary spread of Greek culture, however later conquest from Rome and Asian peoples reverse much of this.
It depends what you mean when you say "the image is upside down":-- If you mean that the front (or obverse) of the coin is upside down relative to the back (or reverse) of the coin when rotated around a vertical axis, this is called coin orientation (as versus medal orientation, in which both the obverse and reverse are oriented the same way) and is how the coin is (and indeed, how all US coins are) supposed to be minted.-- If you mean that the portrait on the obverse is upside down relative to the wording and date on the obverse, then you are describing an error that should not be possible given how the coin dies are produced.-- If you mean that there are two images of the portrait on the obverse, one upside down relative to the other, this would be a double struck error, and would have value to an error collector (especially as such error usually have the second striking more or less aligned with the first).-- If you mean that there is a shadow of an inverse (that is, mirror image) of the portrait on the reverse of the coin, this is called a brockage error and has value to a collector of coin errors.
Reverse ARP is used to Obtain IP address from a Server(responsible for IP addresses allocation) by providing its layer 2 (MAC) address.
US $5 - Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president US $10 - Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury Note that all US bills have identifying captions under the portraits and reverse-side scenes.
The obverse of a coin is the front, main, top, or "heads" side of a coin, usually bearing a portrait. The opposite is the reverse, commonly known as "tails".In British coinage the obverse depicts the portrait of the Sovereign. The portraits, are by convention, side-on. The direction the portrait faces changes with each succeeding Sovereign. Current British coins depict the portrait of Queen Elizabeth II facing to the right, the coins of her father, GeorgeVI, showed his portrait facing to the left.
Alexander Hamilton is the design of the obverse of the ten dollar bill. The reverse of the bill shows the United States Treasury building.
The reverse of any coin is its back. The portrait is on the obverse, or front.
Assuming you're referring to US currency, there are a number of differences between coins and bills issued in 2000 versus those in 2012. These have changed:CoinsLincoln cents: front - same; 2000 reverse - the Lincoln Memorial, 2012 reverse - the Union Shield.Nickels: 2000 front - a left-facing portrait of Thomas Jefferson, 2012 - a forward-facing portrait; reverse - sameQuarters: front - same; 2000 reverse - various state images, 2012 reverse - various national monuments and parksDollars: 2000 front - Sacajawea with the date to the right, 2012 front - Sacajawea or a presidential portrait with the date on the edge; 2000 reverse - a soaring eagle, 2012 reverse - a Native American design or the Statue of LibertyBills2000 - $5, $10, $20, and $50 bills showed their portraits surrounded by an oval frame. 2012 - the same portraits were shown without a frame and blended into the rest of the design.2000 - all bills were green and black; 2012 - $5 are gray and purple, $10 are red and orange, $20 are blue, green, and peach, $50 are red, white, and blue.
The first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton is currently featured on one side of the United States ten-dollar bill, while the U.S. Treasury is featured on the reverse.
For a coin with a given obverse, the reverse may change over a period of time. Coins of British Commonwealth countries for example, have Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse. As she has aged, her portrait is updated every 15 to 20 years, so you have first portrait, second portrait, third portrait, etc. A coin with an unchanging obverse, such as the US one cent coin, may change the design on the reverse periodically so, you have first reverse, second reverse, third reverse, etc. These terms should not be confused with first issue, second issue, etc. when the design of the entire coin is changed, possibly including its size and metallic construction.
You can find information about the portrait castle in Belgium by the Chicago Portrait Company at any art dealer's facility or auction house. This reverse-painting of the castle is often sold in auctions and goes for about 25 dollars as the reproductions are limited in their editions.
"Obverse" refers to the front of the coin (usually the side with the portrait), as versus the "reverse", or back, of the coin.
The term "reverse" refers to the back side of a coin, as opposed to the "obverse", or front side. On US coins, the obverse side is the one with the portrait and (except for the presidential dollars) the date. On foreign coins, it is not always easy to determine which side is the obverse and which is the reverse, although a good rule of thumb is that the side with the portrait, crest, or name of the country is probably the obverse.
The Canadian two-dollar coin has a polar bear on its reverse side. The obverse side has a portrait of Queen Elizabeth. This bill is called the toonie.
Beginning in 1928, the US $100 bill featured US statesman, inventor, and diplomat Benjamin Franklin on the obverse of the $100 bill. On the reverse of the banknote is an image of Independence Hall. The portrait was changed and enlarged for the series 1996 and later bills.Franklin is one of two people on current US bills who never served as president. The other is Alexander Hamilton on the $10 bill. He was the first Secretary of the Treasury.(Sir Robert Borden is on the Canadian $100 bill.)