Please revisit your bill and post a new question :
> Tausendkronen is the bill's denomination, not the country that issued it. It means "one thousand crowns" in German.
> The fact that it's denominated in crowns means it's definitely not 1000 dollars.
> It can't be "in its original country" (???) because most of the countries in Central Europe that existed in 1902 are no longer in existence.
Post a new question with more of the bill's wording. Germany did not use crowns as its currency in 1902 so it's possible your bill is from a region such as Bohemia. Without more details it's impossible to say.
About the same as a = 1000 German mark that is dated 21 April 1910 with serial number 2562221B? =
About $240 USD
founding of the xia dynasty ,about which little is known.
In 1917 Rs 1= $ 13 USD.
Genocide due to out-dated tactics used against modern technology like machine guns combined with idiotic war commanders who were inflexible with their strategies. e.g. when provided with an opening to enemy weakness they would stick with their original tactic at the risk of being fired by their higher officials.
The US did not mint a dollar coin dated 1910. Please either look at the date again or provide the country of origin.
$25.00
What country? The U.S. didn't mind any silver dollars dated 1905.
a dollar
A US dollar coin dated 1797 is a Draped Bust dollar. If you actually have a dollar coin dated 1797, take it to a coin dealer for an accurate assessment. The coin is rare.
The first Trade Dollars are dated 1873. If this coin is a Trade Dollar dated 1798 it's counterfeit.
The first Trade Dollars are dated 1873. If this coin is a Trade Dollar dated 1798 it's counterfeit.
No U.S. one dollar coins are dated 1941.
The first Morgan dollar was coined in 1878, a US dollar coin dated 1797 is a Draped Bust dollar. If you actually have a dollar coin dated 1797, take it to a coin dealer for an accurate assessment.
It's worth one dollar.
Please be more specific. What country are you asking about? The U.S. didn't mint any dollar coins dated 1975, nor were any U.S. coins minted in the 1970s made of gold.
If you have a U.S. silver dollar dated 1790, then you have a counterfeit. The mint did not start making silver dollars until 1794