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Replies: 18 / Views: 9,304 |
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Rest in Peace
 1988 Posts |
Well..my coin weighs 1.25 grams....guess mine is a heavy weight..haha.
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Valued Member
Canada
218 Posts |
The smallest I could find in my collection was from Sweden. They say it's 15mm  .
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Moderator
 Australia
16868 Posts |
You've asked two separate questions: "What is the world's smallest coin?" and "Does anyone have a smaller coin than this?". The first question has been posted and answered numerous times on the forum before; check out the tiny coins in this old thread for example. The answer seems to be "3 to 4 mm", being the size of both the tiny gold quarter-fanams from India as well as the tiny silver hemitetartemorion (1/8th obol) from ancient Greece. The second question has also been asked and answered before, in this old thread, for example. Not many people actually own the really tiny coins; their price is typically much higher than their larger counterparts. As I mentioned in one of the older threads, finding super-tiny ancient coins when they're buried in the ground is tricky because they're too small to be picked up by a metal detector.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Rest in Peace
 1988 Posts |
Xanonite...that is small...well so far I got the worlds 3rd smallest coin...haha
Sap..sorry for duplicateing an old thread..I will try not to do it again because you seems anoyed by this fact..sorry.
Edited by wert 01/05/2014 8:41 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1234 Posts |
I think we may have a winner (with those), these are all measuring 12-13mm. The Netherlands doesn't seem to like large coins  The three in the upper left are from Iceland. same size as the smallest of the Netherlands ones, this next picture includes the smallest coins I have from Uruguay. left to right the piles are Iceland, Netherlands, and Uruguay. at the top is each type sitting on a dime.  Sorry about the lighting but it's just a size comparison. the smallest I have heard of might be the "1/4 JAWA of Nepal" not sure thou I had seen an auction or maybe just sale that claimed to have the worlds smallest gold coin, said it was 22k maybe even 24k. They showed a pile of them and they looked like a thick wire that had been cut down to tiny buttons smaller than a pea.
Edited by ASLAN TVorlon 01/05/2014 8:42 pm
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Rest in Peace
 1988 Posts |
Sap..if you are anoyed I will delete this post..ok
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
The smallest coin I actually have is probably a gold fanam. They are reasonably easy to obtain, but watch out very good jewelry copies. The gold fanam is ideal for this purpose. I have some small doubt in fact, that mine IS genuine, but equally, I have so far been unable to prove that it is false.
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Moderator
 Australia
16868 Posts |
Sorry if I gave the impression I was annoyed; I was not. We don't mind thread duplication, so long as it doesn't happen too often and multiple threads on the same topic are running concurrently; both of those old threads I linked to are more than a few years old. I was just linking to some older threads about this same topic, which already have pictures to and links about the tiny coins under discussion.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
4208 Posts |
Ive got a 6mm roman knocking about. Barbaric issue of Constantine, British tribe. Very rare to find them this small - UK soil melts them down and a lot of people wouldnever notice them - they are basically the colour of the soil, too. 
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
852 Posts |
Sap, isn't the 1/10th of a fanam smaller than the quarter fanam?
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Pillar of the Community
Russian Federation
5180 Posts |
Supposedly the gold "bele" of Vijayanagar is the smallest coin ever by diameter. It is almost certainly the smallest coin ever with its own name (as opposed to a fraction like 1/2 this or 1/4 that or 1/10 other). Not sure if that holds by weight, though (it weighs 0.048 grams, which is very close to the theoretical weight of the Greek silver onkia, and probably heavier than the Nepalese jawa). The zeno.ru site has a picture. It doesn't actually look very small until you notice the scale  I've seen a few pages that claim the bele is the same thing as the 1/10 fanam. That could explain their similar sizes, and isn't impossible from a pure denomination-based standpoint (in fact brief Google searches seem to confirm that theory, though other links seem to say a bele would be 1/8 of a fanam, and I've encountered a few other fractions as well). As for the tiniest coin in my collection, that would be a silver kopek of Peter the Great made in the year 1709. It is only 9 by 6 millimeters in size, and has an official weight of 0.28 grams (I have reasons to suspect that my example is actually even smaller, but I hadn't actually weighed it yet).
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2637 Posts |
Just found this thread. My smallest coin. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1314 Posts |
Quite some time ago, a CCF member posted this picture. (Thanks to whoever I stole it from.) How does it rank, and what does any body know about these?  )
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Pillar of the Community
Russian Federation
5180 Posts |
Quote: Quite some time ago, a CCF member posted this picture. (Thanks to whoever I stole it from.) How does it rank, and what does any body know about these? That would be Doug Smith (I don't recall the CCF nickname, but it's something similar - dougsmit maybe). Quoting the description from his website: Phocaea, Ionia - Silver 1/8 obol? - Late Sixth Century BC - 5mm, .1g Female head 'Smyrna type' left / 4 part incuse - Rosen 598
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1314 Posts |
Thanks. I can see by the stats it is not the smallest, however it is very neat.
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