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Victoria "Completion Of The Central Mint Shakghai China 1930" Piece

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Paul Bulgerin's Avatar
United States
3098 Posts
 Posted 11/07/2016  11:09 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add Paul Bulgerin to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
I won this on ebay yesterday for $2.25. I have no real idea of what it is, but it had free shipping so I tossed in a bid out of curiosity.

I would assume that it's a fantasy piece of some sort struck with the reverse design for some pieces that were struck for the completion of the mint in Shanghai in 1930.

I haven't received it yet and doubt that it's silver.

Any idea? A modern fantasy/fake or what?

Thanks for any help.

Victoria-

Victoria-

Victoria-
Paul Bulgerin
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Sap's Avatar
Australia
16806 Posts
 Posted 11/07/2016  8:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
It is a fantasy.

The obverse is of course based on a British crown of Queen Victoria, late 1800s.

The reverse is based on a dollar-sized silver medal struck to commemorate the opening of the Shanghai mint. A genuine example of the medal, with the correct Sun Yat-Sen obverse, can be found on the ANS collection database website here.

The deliberate mis-spelling of "Shanghai" is there for the same reason that fantasy "coins" with completely wrong dates (eg "1086" instead of 1986) exist: it's supposed to make you say, "Wow! It's an error! It must be valuable!".
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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UltraRant's Avatar
Norway
1358 Posts
 Posted 11/13/2016  04:41 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add UltraRant to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
it's some fantasy piece.

Queen Victoria was long dead and buried in 1930. The Shanghai mint was established in 1920, not 1930. Shanghai is not spelled Shakghai: such a dumb error would have been noted by any means of QA, I guess.
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