The man on the Australian 2 dollar coin is NOBODY!
It is just a picture of a male Aboriginal leader.
Yes. The flag of the indigenous Australian people features a yellow circle against an upper horizontal black half and a lower red half. The flag was originally designed by Harold Thomas, a Luritja man from Central Australia. It was first flown at Victoria Square in Adelaide on National Aborigines Day, 12 July 1971.
Your coin is dated 1959 in U.S. terms, or 4292 - from the Korean calendar!
Winston Churchill was English
like 10 billions of dollar ,,he was the richest man of the planet
Cathy Free man was not looked at much before she made her achievements to day she has given aboriginal people hope and even helped then retrieve some rights
All Australian coins have distinctly Australian themes on the reverse. The Australian Two Dollar coin has a bust of an Australian Aborigine "One Pound Jimmy" from an engraving by Ainslie Roberts, the Southern Cross, a constellation visible from all over Australia, and the Grass Tree (Xanthorrhoea) which is found in all states of Australia.
Any man to appear on an American dollar coin was a U.S. President.
The U.S. Mint has never produced a circulating $2 coin. The closest thing to the $2 coin is the $2.50 Gold "Quarter Eagle" coins which were produced between 1796 and 1929. View the source link below to view the types of coins, pictures and statistics of every $2.50 US Gold coin minted in US history.
H. J. Wedge has written: 'Wiradjuri spirit man' -- subject(s): Aboriginal Australian Painting, Catalogs, Painting, Aboriginal Australian
Andrew Johnson
John Beard Haviland has written: 'Old man Fog and the last Aborigines of Barrow Point' -- subject(s): Aboriginal Australian Mythology, Aboriginal Australians, Biography, History, Mythology, Aboriginal Australian 'Projections, transpositions and relativity'
The 2005 Australian One Dollar coin commemorates the 60th Anniversary of the end of World War 2. The image is from an often played piece of newsreel footage of celebrations in the streets at the news of peace following the Japanese surrender. The newsreel shows the unknown man skipping down the street amongst other celebrating people, waving his hat in the air. The euphoria and relief of peace after almost six years of war.
Ronald Murray Berndt has written: 'The speaking land' -- subject(s): Aboriginal Australian Mythology, Aboriginal Australians, Folklore, Mythology, Aboriginal Australian, Social life and customs, Tales 'The first Australians' -- subject(s): Aboriginal Australians, Ethnology 'A world that was' -- subject(s): Social life and customs, Narrinyeri (Australian people) 'Kunapipi' -- subject(s): Ethnology, Primitive Religion, Religion, Religion, Primitive 'Death, burial, and associated ritual at Ooldea, South Australia' -- subject(s): Burial, Death 'Looking ahead through the past' 'Djanggawul: an aboriginal religious cult of north-eastern Arnhem Land' 'Australian aboriginal art' -- subject(s): Aboriginal Australian Art, Art, Aboriginal Australian, Art, Australian, Art, Primitive, Primitive Art 'An adjustment of movement in Arnhem Land' -- subject(s): Ethnology 'Sexual behavior in western Arnhem land' -- subject(s): Ethnology, Sex 'Man, land & myth in north Australia' -- subject(s): Gunwinggu (Australian people) 'The sacred site' -- subject(s): Religion, Ethnology 'Australian Aboriginal art in the Anthropology Museum of the University of Western Australia' 'From black to white in South Australia' -- subject(s): Native races, Ethnic relations
The coin is a 2009 Sacagawea Dollar, date and mint mark are on the edge of the coin. The coins is face value.
Option 1 What a mess of a coin this was. An Australian 2005 1 Dollar coin is a "90th Anniversary Gallipoli" Commemorative which was issued as a noncirculating coin in a folder or a mint set. Mistruck or not, it is worth at least twice its original purchase value. The reverse design features a soldier blowing a bugle. There is every possibility that there were mistruck coins as the Royal Australian Mint (RAM) had "Mint Your Own" presses at various sites of national significance around the country. There are two coins known to have no mint mark. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation. Option 2 An Australian 2005 1 Dollar coin is a "60th Anniversary of Peace, WW2" Commemorative which, uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch up to $3 AUD. They are still in circulation, so unless they are part of a proof set or as previously described, they are worth 1 Dollar. The reverse design features a man celebrating the end of the war. There were 31.788 million minted. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
Australian aboriginal painter Albert Namatjira was brought up in a Lutheran mission, Hermannsburg, but he still retained his understanding of the mythology of the Aranda, the central Australian tribe to which he belonged.
Andreas Lommel has written: 'Shamanism' -- subject(s): Shamanism, Shamans 'Prehistoric and primitive man' -- subject(s): Art, Prehistoric, Art, Primitive, Prehistoric Art, Primitive Art 'The world of the early hunters' -- subject(s): Shamanism, Shamans 'Die Kunst des alten Australien' -- subject(s): Aboriginal Australian Art, Art, Aboriginal Australian 'Die Unambal' -- subject(s): Wunambal (Australian people) 'L' Art du Bouddhisme' 'Prehistoric and primitive man' 'Masks' -- subject(s): Folklore, Masks, Religion 'The Unambal' -- subject(s): Aboriginal Australians, Wunambal (Australian people)