Learn about four interesting world coins, their designs and other important specifications through this presentation. Find out what makes these coins from India, Greece, Rome and Japan so special.
https://www.mintageworld.com/coins/
The document discusses Visigothic coinage and other late antique coinage relevant to Menorca. It provides details on:
1) The post-Roman coinage system where Germanic kingdoms issued gold and silver coins based on Eastern Roman styles while only the Vandals and Ostrogoths produced copper coins.
2) Late Roman and pseudo-imperial coinage values where the Visigoths and Vandals maintained the Roman coinage system with gold and silver denominations.
3) Visigothic coins specifically, including the common gold solidus and silver tremissis, as well as copper equivalents of the nummus produced locally in Hispania.
The document summarizes gold artifacts from ancient civilizations spanning 3000 years, curated in a virtual exhibition. It describes Sumerian, Egyptian, Mycenaean, Greek, Thracian, Scythian, Persian, and Bactrian goldwork, noting techniques like repoussé, chasing, and granulation. Cultural influences are traced from Sumeria to Egypt to Greece and beyond. The stream of influence is depicted as interconnected rather than a straight line, with ideas crossing borders as empires and groups overlapped.
This document contains summaries and images of various ancient coins from the collector's cabinet. It discusses coins from places including Persia, Phoenicia, Thrace, Greece, Rome, Gaul, Britain, and the Danube region. For example, it describes a silver Siglos coin from Persia dated 486-450 BCE that depicts the Great King kneeling with a bow and spear. It also provides background information on the rulers and places depicted on the coins.
This document provides information on animal-themed coins from various historical periods and regions around the world. It describes coins from ancient civilizations like Rome, Greece, and India from 478 BC to 100 BC, through medieval empires and kingdoms up until British rule in India in the early 20th century. The coins depicted include horses, elephants, lions, bulls, and other animals often shown to represent the ruling powers or significant national symbols of different eras.
Coins & currency system of Bangladesh (ancient to medieval period)Mahmudul Khan
The document provides an overview of the coins and currency systems used in Bangladesh throughout history. It discusses early punch-marked coins from the 6th-2nd centuries BCE and cast copper coins from the 2nd BCE to 3rd CE. It also mentions the use of cowrie shells as currency. Later systems included gold coins introduced by the Kushan dynasty and silver and gold coins produced by the Gupta Empire from the 4th-7th centuries CE. Muslim rulers in Bengal issued coins from the 13th century onwards under the Delhi Sultanate and as independent sultans. Mughal coins were also produced when Bengal was part of the Mughal Empire.
The document provides instructions for an activity where students will view Egyptian and Mesopotamian artifacts in a slideshow and identify which features of civilization each artifact exemplifies. It then lists several Egyptian and Mesopotamian artifacts, providing a brief description and image of each.
The document traces the origins and evolution of coins from ancient times to modern day. It begins with the origins of coins in Lydia in the 8th century BC as a way to simplify tax collection. The Greeks then spread the use of coins around the Mediterranean between the 7th-6th centuries BC, minting coins with symbols representing their polis. Coins then arrived in the Iberian Peninsula through colonization and trade, with the Romans introducing coins like the sestertius during their rule of Hispania. Islamic coins circulated during the rule of Al-Andalus from the 8th-15th centuries AD, before the Catholic Monarchs standardized Spanish coinage in 1497. This led to famous
The document discusses artifacts from various historical periods. It provides images and descriptions of items like jewelry, makeup, shabti figures, paintings, clay tablets, weapons and buckles from ancient Egypt, the classical period, post-classical world and early modern period. These artifacts demonstrate aspects of daily life, religion, trade, technology and fashion from different eras in history.
The document discusses Visigothic coinage and other late antique coinage relevant to Menorca. It provides details on:
1) The post-Roman coinage system where Germanic kingdoms issued gold and silver coins based on Eastern Roman styles while only the Vandals and Ostrogoths produced copper coins.
2) Late Roman and pseudo-imperial coinage values where the Visigoths and Vandals maintained the Roman coinage system with gold and silver denominations.
3) Visigothic coins specifically, including the common gold solidus and silver tremissis, as well as copper equivalents of the nummus produced locally in Hispania.
The document summarizes gold artifacts from ancient civilizations spanning 3000 years, curated in a virtual exhibition. It describes Sumerian, Egyptian, Mycenaean, Greek, Thracian, Scythian, Persian, and Bactrian goldwork, noting techniques like repoussé, chasing, and granulation. Cultural influences are traced from Sumeria to Egypt to Greece and beyond. The stream of influence is depicted as interconnected rather than a straight line, with ideas crossing borders as empires and groups overlapped.
This document contains summaries and images of various ancient coins from the collector's cabinet. It discusses coins from places including Persia, Phoenicia, Thrace, Greece, Rome, Gaul, Britain, and the Danube region. For example, it describes a silver Siglos coin from Persia dated 486-450 BCE that depicts the Great King kneeling with a bow and spear. It also provides background information on the rulers and places depicted on the coins.
This document provides information on animal-themed coins from various historical periods and regions around the world. It describes coins from ancient civilizations like Rome, Greece, and India from 478 BC to 100 BC, through medieval empires and kingdoms up until British rule in India in the early 20th century. The coins depicted include horses, elephants, lions, bulls, and other animals often shown to represent the ruling powers or significant national symbols of different eras.
Coins & currency system of Bangladesh (ancient to medieval period)Mahmudul Khan
The document provides an overview of the coins and currency systems used in Bangladesh throughout history. It discusses early punch-marked coins from the 6th-2nd centuries BCE and cast copper coins from the 2nd BCE to 3rd CE. It also mentions the use of cowrie shells as currency. Later systems included gold coins introduced by the Kushan dynasty and silver and gold coins produced by the Gupta Empire from the 4th-7th centuries CE. Muslim rulers in Bengal issued coins from the 13th century onwards under the Delhi Sultanate and as independent sultans. Mughal coins were also produced when Bengal was part of the Mughal Empire.
The document provides instructions for an activity where students will view Egyptian and Mesopotamian artifacts in a slideshow and identify which features of civilization each artifact exemplifies. It then lists several Egyptian and Mesopotamian artifacts, providing a brief description and image of each.
The document traces the origins and evolution of coins from ancient times to modern day. It begins with the origins of coins in Lydia in the 8th century BC as a way to simplify tax collection. The Greeks then spread the use of coins around the Mediterranean between the 7th-6th centuries BC, minting coins with symbols representing their polis. Coins then arrived in the Iberian Peninsula through colonization and trade, with the Romans introducing coins like the sestertius during their rule of Hispania. Islamic coins circulated during the rule of Al-Andalus from the 8th-15th centuries AD, before the Catholic Monarchs standardized Spanish coinage in 1497. This led to famous
The document discusses artifacts from various historical periods. It provides images and descriptions of items like jewelry, makeup, shabti figures, paintings, clay tablets, weapons and buckles from ancient Egypt, the classical period, post-classical world and early modern period. These artifacts demonstrate aspects of daily life, religion, trade, technology and fashion from different eras in history.
Coins_MA, Sem.II_Material Remains as Source of Ancient Indian History & Cultu...Banaras Hindu University
Punch-marked coins and Indo-Greek coins were important forms of currency in ancient India that provide historical and cultural insights. Punch-marked coins date from 600-200 BCE and feature irregular shapes with symbols punched into the metal. They were issued by merchant guilds and states and can explain contemporary flora, fauna, trade networks, and territorial control. Indo-Greek coins date from 200 BCE to 100 CE and were precisely die-struck in precious metals. They were produced by over 40 rulers across South Asia and Afghanistan and typically included the ruler's name and portrait with Greek or Indian religious imagery. Both coin types influenced later Indian dynasties and provide evidence of economic and cultural exchange.
Scarabs were amulets or seals in the shape of dung beetles used in Ancient Egypt from 2345-30 BC. They were initially just amuletic but later served as seals starting in the Middle Kingdom. The underside was often inscribed with designs or names. Large scarabs were made under Amenhotep III to commemorate events. Funerary scarabs included winged and heart-shaped varieties placed in burials. Scaraboids had the scarab's shape but depicted other creatures. Finely carved scarabs served as seals while inscribed ones commemorated events or were buried as amulets.
The PPP is for the students of UG & PG not for my API and not even for the commercial purpose.
The *slide 50* of this PPP is wrongly typed the name *Samudragupta instead of Chandragupta II*. so kindly correct in your notes.
The document summarizes several important archaeological treasures that have been discovered in Bulgaria, including a 2,400-year-old golden mask of a Thracian king, the Panagyurishte gold treasure consisting of objects depicting Thracian myths and life, and the Varna Chalcolithic Necropolis containing over 3,000 golden objects dating back 6,000 years. It also mentions the Rogozen treasure of over 160 silver vessels and an antique theater built in the second century in Plovdiv that could seat 5,000-7,000 people.
The document provides information on various artifacts and structures from ancient Mesopotamian civilizations including Sumerians, Akkadians, Babylonians, and Assyrians. It describes ziggurats, votive figures, stelae, legal codes like the Code of Hammurabi, cuneiform writing, citadels and palaces, cylinder seals, and early coinage from Lydia including coins from the reign of King Croesus. The document contains details on the purpose, materials, and imagery of these artifacts that provide insight into ancient Near Eastern cultures.
Indo-Greek coins were produced from 300 BCE to 100 BCE in areas now encompassing Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India. Two important Indo-Greek kings discussed are Eucratides I, who ruled from 171-145 BCE, and Menander I, who ruled from 165/155-130 BCE. Indo-Greek kings are primarily known through their coinage, which provides important historical information about the rulers and their territories. Eucratides I produced both Bactrian and Indo-Greek coins in various metals and denominations to commemorate his conquests in modern day Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India.
The crescent symbol originated in ancient Greece where it represented deities of the night like Artemis and Hecate. It was commonly featured on coins and reliefs in Greece and Asia Minor from as early as the 6th century BC. In Byzantium, the crescent came to represent the city after a legendary event where the moon alerted guards to an invading army. The crescent and star became prominent symbols of Byzantium and surrounding regions on coins through the Roman period. Gradually, the cross replaced other symbols starting in the 11th century, though the crescent was still featured alongside the cross on some coins and monuments.
The Indo-Parthian Kingdom was founded in the late 1st century BCE by Gondophares I, a member of the noble Suren family from the Parthian Empire. It encompassed parts of eastern Iran, Afghanistan, and the northwestern Indian subcontinent, with its capital at Taxila. The kingdom was influenced by Parthian, Greek, Buddhist, Hindu, and Zoroastrian cultures. It declined in the 2nd century CE as the Kushan Empire absorbed its northern Indian territories and the Sasanian Empire conquered its remaining territories in modern-day Iran.
This document summarizes the major time periods of archaeology in ancient Mesopotamia from the Neolithic era through the Early Dynastic period. It provides brief descriptions of significant developments within each defined period, including the domestication of plants and animals in the Neolithic, the introduction of irrigation, pottery, and metal tools over time, early writing emerging in the Protoliterate period, and the development of political hierarchies and expansion of writing in the Early Dynastic period under Sargon of Akkad. Artifacts like pottery, seals, and tablets provide evidence of cultural and technological changes occurring across these early civilizations.
Session no.1, 2010. Presentations: Late Empire Roman Coins, by Alejandra J...Ecomuseum Cavalleria
Now, you can see the presentations students from session no. 1 prepared. This is the one made by Alejandra Jiménez, on late Empire Roman coins, paying special attention to the Centenionalis, a type of Roman coin frequently found in Sanitja.
Without the Nile, the rise of Egypt as one of the oldest civilization would not be possible. Travellers to Egypt would be surprise to find the desert is never very far from the Nile. The predictable cycle of flooding of the Nile was a blessing, a major factor to enable civilization to put down its roots in Egypt. This presentation can only give you a briefest of all introductions. It touches upon the deep rooted origin of the Egyptian civilization, it sketches all the important monuments and marks major turning points in their history for its 3000 years of existence. After centuries later, its people disappeared. It civilization forgotten. Though the ruins of their monument and in particular their writing, we began to rediscover their world again, their people, their culture, their religion and their history. We know a lot about their ancient Egypt, perhaps more than others civilization of the time, because they left us with a lot of records in writing. What we have found are fascinations, a human ascend in our long journey to civilization
This video presented by DeLafee is a summary of the history of the use of gold from antiquity to the present day through European, American and Asian cultures.
Get up to 40% OFF on authentic ancient artifacts, coins and jewelry from Sadigh Gallery's 2015 Early Spring Sales Flyer.
There are two ways to Order:
(1.) By Phone. Call us Toll Free 1(800)426-2007 or 1(212)-725-7537. Please have the Item number and Page number ready to ensure a faster and more efficient service.
(2.) By email. Email us at msadigh@earthlink.net. Include Item number and Page number.
Between 3000-1200 BC, three important civilizations flourished in the Aegean region: the Cycladic civilization on the Cyclades islands, the Minoan civilization on Crete, and the Mycenaean civilization on the Greek mainland. The Minoans were known for their palace at Knossos on Crete, which after an earthquake was rebuilt even more grandly in the New Palace period around 1700 BC. Minoan art showed naturalistic styles and was inspired by nature, as seen in frescoes depicting plants, animals, and rituals like bull leaping. The Mycenaeans on the mainland were known for their fortified citadels and shaft graves containing gold funeral masks and other
Without the Nile, the rise of Egypt as one of the oldest civilization would not be possible. Travellers to Egypt would be surprise to find the desert is never very far from the Nile. The predictable cycle of flooding of the Nile was a blessing, a major factor to enable civilization to put down its roots in Egypt.
This presentation can only give you a briefest of all introductions. It touches upon the deep rooted origin of the Egyptian civilization, it sketches all the important monuments and marks major turning points in their history for its 3000 years of existence. After centuries later, its people disappeared. It civilization forgotten. Though the ruins of their monument and in particular their writing, we began to rediscover their world again, their people, their culture, their religion and their history. We know a lot about their ancient Egypt, perhaps more than others civilization of the time, because they left us with a lot of records in writing. What we have found are fascinations, a human ascend in our long journey to civilization
Punch-marked coins made of silver and copper dating back to the 6th century BCE were among the earliest coins used in India. The Indo-Greeks who ruled the northwest in the 2nd century BCE were the first to issue coins bearing the names and images of rulers. The Kushanas issued the first gold coins in the 1st century CE that were similar in weight to Roman and Parthian coins. Tribal republics like the Yaudheyas also produced copper coins. The Gupta dynasty was known for issuing high purity gold coins that facilitated long-distance trade.
The Indo-Parthian Kingdom was founded in the late 1st century BCE by Gondophares I after the breakup of the Parthian Empire. It ruled over parts of eastern Iran, Afghanistan, and the northwestern Indian subcontinent from its capitals in Taxila and the region between Kabul and Peshawar. The dynasty lasted until around 250 CE when it began losing territory to invasions from the Kushan Empire and Sasanian Empire, ultimately leading to its decline and fall. Key Indo-Parthian rulers included Gondophares I, Abdagases I, Gondophares III, Gondophares IV Sases, and the last well-at
Roman city dig, session 10, 2012: Late empire Roman coins, by Andrew WalshEcomuseum Cavalleria
This document discusses the Roman Empire during the Late Empire period from the 3rd to 5th centuries AD. It describes economic and political instability during the "Crisis of the Third Century" that led Diocletian to split the empire into eastern and western sections. Constantine legalized Christianity and emperors attempted to address currency issues through reforms but faced challenges from coin clipping, debasing, and changing monetary standards.
Coins_MA, Sem.II_Material Remains as Source of Ancient Indian History & Cultu...Banaras Hindu University
Punch-marked coins and Indo-Greek coins were important forms of currency in ancient India that provide historical and cultural insights. Punch-marked coins date from 600-200 BCE and feature irregular shapes with symbols punched into the metal. They were issued by merchant guilds and states and can explain contemporary flora, fauna, trade networks, and territorial control. Indo-Greek coins date from 200 BCE to 100 CE and were precisely die-struck in precious metals. They were produced by over 40 rulers across South Asia and Afghanistan and typically included the ruler's name and portrait with Greek or Indian religious imagery. Both coin types influenced later Indian dynasties and provide evidence of economic and cultural exchange.
Scarabs were amulets or seals in the shape of dung beetles used in Ancient Egypt from 2345-30 BC. They were initially just amuletic but later served as seals starting in the Middle Kingdom. The underside was often inscribed with designs or names. Large scarabs were made under Amenhotep III to commemorate events. Funerary scarabs included winged and heart-shaped varieties placed in burials. Scaraboids had the scarab's shape but depicted other creatures. Finely carved scarabs served as seals while inscribed ones commemorated events or were buried as amulets.
The PPP is for the students of UG & PG not for my API and not even for the commercial purpose.
The *slide 50* of this PPP is wrongly typed the name *Samudragupta instead of Chandragupta II*. so kindly correct in your notes.
The document summarizes several important archaeological treasures that have been discovered in Bulgaria, including a 2,400-year-old golden mask of a Thracian king, the Panagyurishte gold treasure consisting of objects depicting Thracian myths and life, and the Varna Chalcolithic Necropolis containing over 3,000 golden objects dating back 6,000 years. It also mentions the Rogozen treasure of over 160 silver vessels and an antique theater built in the second century in Plovdiv that could seat 5,000-7,000 people.
The document provides information on various artifacts and structures from ancient Mesopotamian civilizations including Sumerians, Akkadians, Babylonians, and Assyrians. It describes ziggurats, votive figures, stelae, legal codes like the Code of Hammurabi, cuneiform writing, citadels and palaces, cylinder seals, and early coinage from Lydia including coins from the reign of King Croesus. The document contains details on the purpose, materials, and imagery of these artifacts that provide insight into ancient Near Eastern cultures.
Indo-Greek coins were produced from 300 BCE to 100 BCE in areas now encompassing Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India. Two important Indo-Greek kings discussed are Eucratides I, who ruled from 171-145 BCE, and Menander I, who ruled from 165/155-130 BCE. Indo-Greek kings are primarily known through their coinage, which provides important historical information about the rulers and their territories. Eucratides I produced both Bactrian and Indo-Greek coins in various metals and denominations to commemorate his conquests in modern day Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India.
The crescent symbol originated in ancient Greece where it represented deities of the night like Artemis and Hecate. It was commonly featured on coins and reliefs in Greece and Asia Minor from as early as the 6th century BC. In Byzantium, the crescent came to represent the city after a legendary event where the moon alerted guards to an invading army. The crescent and star became prominent symbols of Byzantium and surrounding regions on coins through the Roman period. Gradually, the cross replaced other symbols starting in the 11th century, though the crescent was still featured alongside the cross on some coins and monuments.
The Indo-Parthian Kingdom was founded in the late 1st century BCE by Gondophares I, a member of the noble Suren family from the Parthian Empire. It encompassed parts of eastern Iran, Afghanistan, and the northwestern Indian subcontinent, with its capital at Taxila. The kingdom was influenced by Parthian, Greek, Buddhist, Hindu, and Zoroastrian cultures. It declined in the 2nd century CE as the Kushan Empire absorbed its northern Indian territories and the Sasanian Empire conquered its remaining territories in modern-day Iran.
This document summarizes the major time periods of archaeology in ancient Mesopotamia from the Neolithic era through the Early Dynastic period. It provides brief descriptions of significant developments within each defined period, including the domestication of plants and animals in the Neolithic, the introduction of irrigation, pottery, and metal tools over time, early writing emerging in the Protoliterate period, and the development of political hierarchies and expansion of writing in the Early Dynastic period under Sargon of Akkad. Artifacts like pottery, seals, and tablets provide evidence of cultural and technological changes occurring across these early civilizations.
Session no.1, 2010. Presentations: Late Empire Roman Coins, by Alejandra J...Ecomuseum Cavalleria
Now, you can see the presentations students from session no. 1 prepared. This is the one made by Alejandra Jiménez, on late Empire Roman coins, paying special attention to the Centenionalis, a type of Roman coin frequently found in Sanitja.
Without the Nile, the rise of Egypt as one of the oldest civilization would not be possible. Travellers to Egypt would be surprise to find the desert is never very far from the Nile. The predictable cycle of flooding of the Nile was a blessing, a major factor to enable civilization to put down its roots in Egypt. This presentation can only give you a briefest of all introductions. It touches upon the deep rooted origin of the Egyptian civilization, it sketches all the important monuments and marks major turning points in their history for its 3000 years of existence. After centuries later, its people disappeared. It civilization forgotten. Though the ruins of their monument and in particular their writing, we began to rediscover their world again, their people, their culture, their religion and their history. We know a lot about their ancient Egypt, perhaps more than others civilization of the time, because they left us with a lot of records in writing. What we have found are fascinations, a human ascend in our long journey to civilization
This video presented by DeLafee is a summary of the history of the use of gold from antiquity to the present day through European, American and Asian cultures.
Get up to 40% OFF on authentic ancient artifacts, coins and jewelry from Sadigh Gallery's 2015 Early Spring Sales Flyer.
There are two ways to Order:
(1.) By Phone. Call us Toll Free 1(800)426-2007 or 1(212)-725-7537. Please have the Item number and Page number ready to ensure a faster and more efficient service.
(2.) By email. Email us at msadigh@earthlink.net. Include Item number and Page number.
Between 3000-1200 BC, three important civilizations flourished in the Aegean region: the Cycladic civilization on the Cyclades islands, the Minoan civilization on Crete, and the Mycenaean civilization on the Greek mainland. The Minoans were known for their palace at Knossos on Crete, which after an earthquake was rebuilt even more grandly in the New Palace period around 1700 BC. Minoan art showed naturalistic styles and was inspired by nature, as seen in frescoes depicting plants, animals, and rituals like bull leaping. The Mycenaeans on the mainland were known for their fortified citadels and shaft graves containing gold funeral masks and other
Without the Nile, the rise of Egypt as one of the oldest civilization would not be possible. Travellers to Egypt would be surprise to find the desert is never very far from the Nile. The predictable cycle of flooding of the Nile was a blessing, a major factor to enable civilization to put down its roots in Egypt.
This presentation can only give you a briefest of all introductions. It touches upon the deep rooted origin of the Egyptian civilization, it sketches all the important monuments and marks major turning points in their history for its 3000 years of existence. After centuries later, its people disappeared. It civilization forgotten. Though the ruins of their monument and in particular their writing, we began to rediscover their world again, their people, their culture, their religion and their history. We know a lot about their ancient Egypt, perhaps more than others civilization of the time, because they left us with a lot of records in writing. What we have found are fascinations, a human ascend in our long journey to civilization
Punch-marked coins made of silver and copper dating back to the 6th century BCE were among the earliest coins used in India. The Indo-Greeks who ruled the northwest in the 2nd century BCE were the first to issue coins bearing the names and images of rulers. The Kushanas issued the first gold coins in the 1st century CE that were similar in weight to Roman and Parthian coins. Tribal republics like the Yaudheyas also produced copper coins. The Gupta dynasty was known for issuing high purity gold coins that facilitated long-distance trade.
The Indo-Parthian Kingdom was founded in the late 1st century BCE by Gondophares I after the breakup of the Parthian Empire. It ruled over parts of eastern Iran, Afghanistan, and the northwestern Indian subcontinent from its capitals in Taxila and the region between Kabul and Peshawar. The dynasty lasted until around 250 CE when it began losing territory to invasions from the Kushan Empire and Sasanian Empire, ultimately leading to its decline and fall. Key Indo-Parthian rulers included Gondophares I, Abdagases I, Gondophares III, Gondophares IV Sases, and the last well-at
Roman city dig, session 10, 2012: Late empire Roman coins, by Andrew WalshEcomuseum Cavalleria
This document discusses the Roman Empire during the Late Empire period from the 3rd to 5th centuries AD. It describes economic and political instability during the "Crisis of the Third Century" that led Diocletian to split the empire into eastern and western sections. Constantine legalized Christianity and emperors attempted to address currency issues through reforms but faced challenges from coin clipping, debasing, and changing monetary standards.
Similar to Rare world coins from india, greece, rome and japan (20)
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2. These rare coins of the world were issued
during the reign of Kumaragupta - I from
Gupta Empire, somewhere between 415
AD and 455 AD. This gold dinar weighs
around 7 to 8 grams.
The obverse side depicts a king holding
ankush, seated on an elephant, attendant
sitting behind holding a chattra on his head.
The reverse side depicts a Goddess
standing on a lotus, holding the stalk of a
lotus in left hand and a lotus flower in her
right hand.
3.
4. These valuable Coins from around the
world were issued for the state of
Macedonia from Greece during the rule of
Phillip II between 359 BC and 336 BC. This
gold Stater weighs 17.2 grams.
The obverse side of these world coins
depict the forepart of a bridled Horse to the
right, along with the inscription
"QRTHDST'". The reverse side shows a
palm tree with two date clusters and an
inscription "MHNT"
5.
6. These stunning rare world coins were
issued by the Julio-Claudian dynasty ruler,
Augustus of Rome. This Gold Aureus
weighs around 7.30 grams and were die-
struck between 19 BC and 18 BC at
Pergamum mint.
The obverse side shows the head of
Augustus facing right with legend
"AVGVSTVS" while the reverse side shows
Capricon facing right with the legend
"SIGNIS RECEPTIS"
7.
8. These rare coins of the world were issued
for Tokugawa Shogunate of Japan during
the rule of Iyemitsu between 1636 and
1656. They bore the denomination Mon and
were cast in Copper, bronze or brass at
Edo (Tokyo) and Sakamoto.
The obverse side features a Japanese
Inscription that translates to Kwan-Ei
(Kanei) Tsu-Ho, while the reverse side is
left blank.
9. If you want to build an impressive world
coin collection, you must keep
researching about rare and unique
varieties.
So, get immersed in the world of coins and
enjoy exploring world history in an exciting
new way!