The country of origin and the denomination of the coin would be a big help.
Holes in the centre of coins is no longer as widespread a practice as it once was, although some countries continue to do so as a tradition.
yes
As there was an even number of years, there is no single middle year. So 1950 and 1951 were the middle years. You could therefore say that the year running from the 1st of July 1950 to the 30th of June 1951 was the middle year of the 20th century.
im searching for the value of it, but its a one pice 1953 indian coin...
it is 5 .5 centermeters long exactly
If it's a U.S. penny than it shouldn't.
yes
No British coin is minted with a hole in the middle. You may have a privately minted coin, token or medallion. A little more detail would be helpful.
More than one Hong Kong coin had a hole in the middle. These coins were made for many years. Be more descriptive. Add the date and words on the coin, then I can answer your question.
The value is just for the silver in the coin
Please reword you question so that it means something.
A round copper coin with a square hole in the middle was called Wuzhu was circulated nationwide
It gets bigger
No it's the hole that kills collectible value. If the coin is silver it has scrap value
No
Coins were made with holes for several reasons, two of them being to save on the amount of metal used to make the coin, and to have a way to string all of your coins together for easier handling.
The China Coin or rather, the Chinese Coin was a coin used for cash. The cash coins began through bartering for farming tools and agriculture products. The coins have a hole through the middle and they are strung on a string and carried over the shoulder.
The China Coin or rather, the Chinese Coin was a coin used for cash. The cash coins began through bartering for farming tools and agriculture products. The coins have a hole through the middle and they are strung on a string and carried over the shoulder.