Mixed Coin Collection

Slutar 17 mar 17:52

Utropspris

100 kr

107 kr med köparskydd.

Stones_And_Coins

Nykvarn, Sverige

5.0

Stones_And_Coins

Verifierad

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Beskrivning

A curated international coin collection spanning multiple European monarchies, republics, and early modern to twentieth-century circulating issues, assembled across two archival album leaves and featuring a broad mix of bronze, copper, nickel, aluminium, and silver-toned denominations from identifiable national mints and historic issuing authorities. The group includes clearly visible Scandinavian material from Denmark, Sweden, and Norway, with Danish crowned issues showing the royal monogram and denomination formats such as 5 Øre and larger copper pieces associated with the reigns of early twentieth-century Danish monarchs, alongside Swedish circulation coins bearing the crowned “1 Öre” and “5 Öre” types, with legible mid-century dates including 1942 and 1949, and royal portrait coinage tied to the Swedish kingdom’s state mint traditions in Stockholm. Norwegian representation appears in copper and bronze denominations carrying the characteristic lion emblem and cross motifs associated with Oslo mint circulation output.
British and Commonwealth material is strongly represented through several large copper and bronze portrait coins, including unmistakable one penny types of the United Kingdom with seated Britannia reverse, likely Victorian and later George-era issues, together with halfpenny-sized pieces and larger imperial portrait coinage showing legible legends around crowned monarch busts. Several coins display the classic British copper fabric associated with nineteenth- and early twentieth-century London mint production, including worn but identifiable portrait heads and shield reverses. A British decimal-era copper-nickel and bronze mix also appears, with smaller denominations placed beside larger imperial copper types, illustrating continuity in United Kingdom circulating currency.
French coinage is present through Marianne portrait types and republican inscriptions, including a clearly visible “Liberté” style coin consistent with French Third Republic circulation, while Belgium appears through perforated and small-denomination pieces including the classic holed centime format, with visible central perforation and dated continental bronze fabric associated with Belgian mint output in Brussels. A Netherlands-related issue is suggested by crowned monograms and denomination styles typical of Dutch cent and stuiver circulation, while Germanic-region material appears through eagle and wreath motifs characteristic of continental European state coinage.
A notable Eastern European and Soviet-era section includes multiple coins bearing Cyrillic lettering and hammer-and-sickle imagery, indicating Soviet circulation issues from the USSR, with clearly visible communist state emblems and dated twentieth-century copper-nickel pieces. These Soviet examples sit alongside additional Eastern Bloc circulation types, reflecting Cold War monetary history and industrial-era minting styles. Several coins also show Latin-script legends from Central Europe, including Austro-Hungarian or successor-state bronze denominations, with imperial portrait fragments and denomination numerals visible despite circulation wear.
Among the more identifiable dated pieces are examples showing years such as 1949, 1942, 1926, and other early-to-mid twentieth century strikes, with some larger copper coins extending stylistically into late nineteenth-century imperial circulation. Portraits of monarchs including George VI, George V, and Scandinavian kings are visible, together with republican allegorical busts and crowned shield reverses, giving the collection broad historical depth across monarchy, republic, and socialist issuing periods.
The collection has been curated to emphasize diversity in denomination, metal composition, and geographic origin, combining larger crown-sized pieces with small fractional coins, perforated issues, wartime alloys, and classic bronze imperial currency. Visible mint traditions include London, Copenhagen, Stockholm, Brussels, Paris, and Soviet state mint production, making the group attractive for collectors interested in European circulation history, monarchic portrait evolution, and twentieth-century numismatic transitions across Western and Eastern Europe. Surface wear, oxidation, and patina are consistent with circulated historical material and enhance the documentary character of this mixed international coin archive.

Objektnr 721 631 957

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