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I Need Help Identifying These Asian Coins

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Valued Member

United States
360 Posts
 Posted 10/15/2013  7:21 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add Afterimage to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Hey there. I found these coins a couple of years ago and had them stashed away for safe keeping. Does anybody know what countries these are from?

I-Need-Help-Identifying-These-Asian-Coins

I-Need-Help-Identifying-These-Asian-Coins

Thanks for looking!

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zxcccxz's Avatar
Canada
5417 Posts
 Posted 10/15/2013  7:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add zxcccxz to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I see 3 Chinese (Top 3), 2 Japanese and 1 middle eastern (Guessing Israel). I'll leave it to the experts to get into detail.
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nalaberong's Avatar
Canada
2805 Posts
 Posted 10/15/2013  7:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nalaberong to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Got them!
Row 1:
1. South Korea, 50 Won, 1996
2. Taiwan (Republic of China), 5 Yuan, Year 71 (1982)
3. South Korea, 100 Won, 1984
Row 2:
1. Japan, 10 Yen, Shouwa 60 (1985)
2. Morocco, 1 Dirham, 1974

My handy identification guide:

- The Korean language has circles in it, while Chinese and Japanese have straighter squares and lines. There are about 10 won to 1 cent. The modern series of South Korean coins all have the same style of numbering on them.
- Taiwanese coins usually have the same person on them, Sun Yat-Sen. Mainland Chinese coins all have the distinctive crest of the DPR China on the back.
- Japanese yen can usually be determined through process of elimination, but they don't change much so you only have to learn to recognize a few types.

For the modern Middle East and thereabouts...
- Israel uses Hebrew, English and Arabic! Hebrew is a very distinctive alphabet, and most Israeli coins just say "Israel" on them, so they are easy to spot.
- Morocco's usual symbol is the pentagram, visible at the center of your coin's coat of arms.
- Egypt, Sudan and Syria all have an eagle on the back - they are slightly different, though.
- Turkish coins say "Türkiye Cumhuriyeti" - hopefully you figured it out by "Türkiye".
- Iranian coins (note: please send these to me, I want them all) either have a lion holding a sword behind a rising sun, or (after 1979) a real variety that's fairly difficult to identify, although a big number is a clue for the recent ones (coins go up to 5000 rials).
- UAE coins show up fairly often, but they say UNITED ARAB EMIRATES, so that's easy.
- Jordanian coins come in a few fun shapes and say THE HASHEMITE KINGDOM OF JORDAN in English.
- Lebanese coins have the cedar tree on them!
Edited by nalaberong
10/15/2013 8:08 pm
Valued Member
United States
360 Posts
 Posted 10/15/2013  8:00 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Afterimage to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Got them!
Row 1:
1. South Korea, 50 Won, 1996
2. Taiwan (Republic of China), 5 Yuan, Year 71 (1982)
3. South Korea, 100 Won, 1984
Row 2:
1. Japan, 10 Yen, Shouwa 60 (1985)
2. Morocco, 1 Dirham, 1974


Sweet! Thank you! I had a feeling the top middle coin was from Taiwan. Pretty sure that's Chang Kai Shek on the obverse.

Man, I was way off with the Moroccan coin. I was thinking it was from Java or Sumatra...something like that.
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