It is a Mexico one-centavo coin (brass). They have an insignificant legal-tender value even with the devaluation of the Peso in 1993. However, with the peso again trading for a fraction of a dollar, coins smaller than 50 centavos no longer circulate. The last one centavo coins were minted in 1973, more than 40 years ago.
It is possible that the coins may have a small collectible value, but as of 2014 they were either inexpensive or being offered at unrealistic markups.
What is the cost with flag on the and eagle on the other
The Eagle is the national symbol and was required by law to be on the $1 coins (and most other coins) until Congress suspended it to allow the Statue of Liberty to be placed on the reverse of the Presidential dollars. Now the only coin we still make with a Eagle reverse is the Kennedy half dollars and the American Eagle Bullion coins.
Before 1933, the three primary denominations of gold coins minted in the United States were the $20 Double Eagle, the $10 Eagle, and the $5 Half Eagle. The Double Eagle, featuring designs like the St. Gaudens and Liberty, was the largest denomination, while the Eagle and Half Eagle featured images of Liberty and various other motifs. These coins were primarily produced for circulation and investment purposes until the gold standard was abandoned in the early 1930s.
This coin has a eagle on one side and a double eagle on the other. On the side with the eagle head it has written American Eagle Bicentennial 1985 and on the side with the double eagle is written double eagle commemorative with stars and 200 years It appears to have a silver base with the eagle's done in gold. It is in a clear plastic case. Any ideas of worth?
The black eagle dollar you refer to was first issued in 1899. It, like other currency of the time, was about 25% larger than todays currency. This large size has led people to refer to them as "horse blanket" bills. The 1899 bill is called the black eagle dollar because it has a large picture of an eagle with open wings and the printing is in black ink. This currency is collectable and is very sought after by collectors regardless of the condition of the bill.
No. However its official name would be United Mexican States (Spanish: Estados Unidos Mexicanos).
yes in good condition
The full official name is Estados Unidos Mexicanos - México for short.The spellings Estados Unidos Mejicanos and Méjicoare also used in some other Spanish-speaking areas (notably, Spain) but not in Mexico itself.
Nothing. These were coins made as copies for unknown reasons. Hence the word "COPIA". Copia in spanish means COPY. Look at the eagle on the flip side of the coin and you will see that it is facing to the right. On a real Mexican 20 Centavo piece, the eagle will be facing left. You've got yourself a fake coin.
Need more information to identify the coin: Metal (or color), size, denomination, any other words on the coin. Then the grade needs to be determined before a value can be assigned. How much of the original design remains? (Often hard to determine. If you do not have an uncirculated example for comparison you do not know how many feathers should show on the eagle, etc).
An Eagle Scout Award looks good on a college application and so helps everywhere it is not required for BYU or any other school.
Do you mean 1993?As a way to deal with high inflation, Mexico revalued its currency in 1993. Old pesos were withdrawn and replaced with "new pesos" (nuevos pesos) at the rate of 1000 old to one new.If your coin is from 1993 and not 1893, it's a common circulation coin worth about $1 at current exchange rates.
Griffin is a mythological monster with half the body that looks like a lion with a tail while the other half is with a head and wings like an eagle.
Please; describe this coin in more detail. Post new question
An eagle is generally heavier than most other birds of prey.
The heads side looks like all other Kennedy half dollars, but with the dates 1776-1976. The on the back, instead of an eagle, it's Independence Hall.
the eagle. it is a bird