to show that the person belongs to his kingdom usually they put the king's faces in the coins.
Ancient Greek coins often had the faces of Kings/Gods/Goddesses/famous people on them.
Coins have faces on them to honor that person , statesmen , or president , and they symbolize the country that they were issued by.
The Lincoln penny of 1909 was the first US coin with a president's face on it.
the presidents.
Queen Elizabeth II faces to the right on British coins. Traditionally, kings and queens alternate the direction they face on British (and most Commonwealth) coins. King George VI (1937-1952) faces to the left. King Edward VIII (1936) broke tradition and faced left, but his coins were never issued in Britain. King George V (1911-1936) faces to the left. King Edward VII (1902-1910) faces to the right. Queen Victoria (1838-1901) faces to the left. King William IV (1830-1837) faces to the right. King George IV (1820-1830) faces to the left. King George III (1760-1820) faces to the right. King George II (1727-1760) faces to the left. King George I (1714-1727) faces to the right. Queen Anne (1702-1714) faces to the left. etc.
The patterns on coinage are made by squeezing the coins metal blank between the faces of two hard presses into which the negative of the coins faces have been etched (called dies).
Abraham Lincoln
The value of coins comes from how old they are, the condition, and the metal they are made from. Some older coins have different faces because the leaders of countries change over time.
Kings put crowns on their (not "there") heads.
The US Congress passed a law that ordered the US mint to issue these coins. The plan was to get people to use the one-dollar coins in place of the paper dollar bills and save millions in replacement costs. ( I do not know which Congressmen or senators pushed for the law.)
because they didnt want other kings faces or stuff on it.....................:]
You have to find Dungens That have faces of the mobs. There is a chest that have them