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49 Days Of Low Mintage US And World Coins

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Coopertron5000's Avatar
United Kingdom
516 Posts
 Posted 09/22/2017  2:40 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coopertron5000 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
My only Standing Liberty quarter, therefore my lowest mintage.


49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins

1929
Mintage: 11,140,000
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AcesKings's Avatar
United States
1629 Posts
 Posted 09/22/2017  4:30 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add AcesKings to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
My lowest mintage so far, 1,358,000.

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
Bedrock of the Community
United States
10284 Posts
 Posted 09/22/2017  8:12 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add TNG to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
1928-S mintage 2,644,000
my lowest mintage example

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
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barryg's Avatar
United States
5870 Posts
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United States
10284 Posts
 Posted 09/23/2017  08:28 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add TNG to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Washington Quarters
1932-D 436,800
1932-S 408,000

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
You scratch my front, I'll scratch yours!
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Dorado's Avatar
Canada
24885 Posts
 Posted 09/23/2017  7:43 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dorado to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
1952D
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
1967 SMS
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
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jbuck's Avatar
United States
190135 Posts
 Posted 09/24/2017  12:21 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Remember that one thread about how I accidentally convinced a dealer that a rare silver coin was aluminium?

When I returned to that dealer to explain my mistake, he said that it wasn't a problem (more details in that thread, IIRC), and I immediately proceeded to buy this little quarter for about $3 (dealer's price, despite my protests that it sounded a bit low).
Very nice!
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spru's Avatar
United States
12477 Posts
 Posted 09/24/2017  01:51 am  Show Profile   Check spru's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add spru to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I've missed a few days...

I'll catch up a little with the Washington quarters. My lowest mintage is a 1998-S Silver proof but, I dont have pics yet. So here are the six that tie for second.

2009-S Silver proof D.C. & Territories
Total mintage: 996,548 each

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
In Memory of Crazyb0 12-26-1951 to 7-27-2020
In Memory of Tootallious 3-31-1964 to 4-15-2020
In Memory of T-BOP 10-12-1949 to 1-19-2024
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Finn235's Avatar
United States
6130 Posts
 Posted 09/24/2017  07:42 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Finn235 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
What's going on with the lips on the obverse of the Guam? Almost looks like a filled die giving ol' George the pouty lips?
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United States
10284 Posts
 Posted 09/24/2017  08:17 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add TNG to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I think that's just the reflection of the plastic and an effect on the mirror field Finn on that Guam quarter.
Anyways, I will post my favorite ancient coin I have and post my estimated rarity and then you can tell me how many were made Finn as I have no clue. My little ancient collection has no mintage figures, probably a rarity scale instead.
This is my favorite and I guess the others who post will go by a rarity scale instead of mintage or numbers known of existing examples.

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins

I wouldn't have a clue if you didn't supply this info and images Finn, thanks!
I think it's silver and fairly common. From what I have learned, if the arrow and lightning bolt were reversed it would be a lot more rare as I have found a couple like that searching.


India, Indo-Scythians
Nahapana (c. 100 AD)
AR Drachm
Obv: Bust of Nahapana Right
Rev: Thunderbolt and Arrow, legend in Brahmi (left) and Kharosthi (right), "Nahapana, King and Satrap"

Nahapana was the third or fourth--and final--king of the first wave of Indo-Scythians to push into the heartland of India. He created a booming economy (as evidenced by a huge outpour of silver coinage) but his legacy came to a screeching halt when he was defeated and killed by the native Satavahana empire. His entire family was executed and it would be another several decades before the Scythians were able to re-take the lost territory.
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Finn235's Avatar
United States
6130 Posts
 Posted 09/24/2017  09:09 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Finn235 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Ancients day!

Since "ancient" encompasses about 2,000 years (600 BC until 1400 AD) I hope I can be forgiven for posting more than one coin!

Unknown, probably local imitation of Kushan type, ca. 150-400 AD
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
This one had experts on three different forums stumped. It's not in any reference catalog, and nobody has seen one like it before. I figure that speaks for itself?

Rome, Aemilian. August-October 253
Unlike some later short-lived emperors, Aemilian struggled to gain enough acceptance to have coins minted in his name, and was also declared a public enemy upon his death and non-hoarded coins were recalled. All of his coins are rare to very rare.
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins

Constantine the Great
PROVIDENTIAE CAESS, Camp Gate or city fortification
Unpublished and likely unique mule from Trier, 3rd officina (T*AR), using a reverse of Crispus or Constantine II. Providentiae Caess means "foresight of the Caesars" and is not a legend the Emperor would have used. Trier's third mint office is not known to have produced any coins for Constantine at all. This is comparable to a 1999 WAM cent turning up from the Denver mint.
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins

Crispus AE3
IVL CRISPVS NOB CAES
Laureate, consular bust right,
wearing trabea, eagle-tipped scepter in right hand.
BEATA TRANQVILLITAS, Globe on altar inscribed VO/TIS/XX, three stars above
Trier Mint
Mintmark Dot PTR dot
RIC 376, Rated R4, 3-5 known (in the 1980s... more have been found since)

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins

A small selection of my favorite "barbarous" Roman coins, from ca. 265-350. These are poorly understood, but may have been:
1. Imitations made by the barbarians north of the Rhine
2. Emergency supplies of small change made by local blacksmiths, with or without official approval.
3. Attempts to counterfeit.

That said, while these coins as a whole are almost as common as regular coinage, these were made on a small scale with cheap equipment. Die matches are exceedingly rare to nonexistent, and most individual types probably had mintage runs in the low hundreds before a new die was required.

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins

Huns in Sindh (Pakistan), ca. 600 AD
Sri Yashaaditya silver "obol"
Known from a single hoard of a few hundred, first discovered in 1990s.
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins

Huns or Gurjuras in NW India, ca. 550-700 AD
Peroz-imitation type (the great-great-granduncle of the Gadhaiya Paisa)
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins

I only currently own one, but note that these coins are a die match to each other. I purchased these about a year apart, ostensibly from different hoards. I have only ever seen these two, and the fact that they are die matches strongly supports the hypotheses that only a single die was ever made. This particular type (broad flan, large nose, no facial hair) is also quite rare itself.
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Dorado's Avatar
Canada
24885 Posts
 Posted 09/24/2017  4:36 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dorado to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
1578 France.
Henri III 1/8 ecu.
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
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Coopertron5000's Avatar
United Kingdom
516 Posts
 Posted 09/24/2017  6:23 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coopertron5000 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Three types of English Medieval cut 1/2 penny.

With the single exception of a rare gold coin valued at twenty silver pence, the long cross coinage consists of a single denomination, the silver penny. Although small quantities of halfpennies had occasionally been struck since Saxon times, and a very small number of round halfpennies and farthings were minted towards the end of the short cross issue, the disproportionate cost of producing such small coins seems to have deterred the authorities from making any real effort.

The need for small change was nevertheless extremely acute. A penny, which represented approximately a day's pay for a skilled labourer, would buy two dozen eggs, two large loaves of bread or at least two gallons of ale. The solution, also adopted from the earliest times, was to cut the penny into halves and quarters. In fact, the voided cross design employed on the reverses of both the short cross and long cross coins was chosen to facilitate this measure.

The majority of cut coins have cleanly cut edges, which appear to have been made with an accurately positioned and sharp tool. A minority of them, however, show evidence of less skilled performance. Telltale signs include misaligned and multiple attempts at cutting, and irregular edges resulting from breaking the coin by repeated reverse bending. Such action would have been an obvious remedy whenever 'official' small change was not to hand.

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
John/Henry III Short Cross 1/2 Penny
Class 6b1 1208-1218
Unknown moneyer, London mint.

The condition of the money circulating in England in the 1240s was probably as bad as it had ever been. The coins were all of the short cross type introduced more than sixty years beforehand, and the last general recoinage had taken place in 1205. Inevitably a high proportion of the coins were badly worn, but more significantly many were also clipped - an illegal practice performed by unscrupulous individuals, who would melt down the resulting slivers of metal and profit by selling the silver.

In order to thwart would-be clippers, it was decided that the new coins would carry a design in which the reverse cross would extend to the edge. If any of the four cross-ends were removed, the coin would be deemed illegal.

The terms on which the recoinage was conducted, while lucrative for the king and his brother, were very onerous for the public. Anyone bringing their short cross coins to the exchange would receive only as many new pennies by weight as could be coined from those they deposited, regardless of face value. A further thirteen pence in every pound, over five percent, was charged for the expenses incurred in minting, which included a margin from which the earl and the king derived their profit. A chronicler of the time alleged that the man who brought in thirty shillings worth of old pence (360 pennies) got back little more than twenty shillings (240 pennies) in the new money.

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
Henry III Voided Long Cross 1/2 Penny
Class 3c-d 1249-1250
Moneyer Gilbert(Gilbert de Bonnington), Canterbury mint.
Gilbert de Bonnington was an ecclesiastical moneyer working for the archbishop of Canterbury

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
Edward I Long Cross 1/2d
London mint.
A major change brought about by the recoinage of 1279 was the introduction of three new denominations. In addition to the penny, there was the halfpenny, the farthing and the groat of four pence. The striking of round halfpennies and farthings eliminated the need to cut pennies into halves and quarters, another practice that dated back to the Anglo-Saxon period. The voided reverse cross, used on pennies for the previous one hundred years to facilitate this process, was thus no longer required, and was replaced by a plain cross.

Interestingly, this cut half seems to have been done unofficially after the introduction of the round half pennies and farthings. The process of cutting pennies was usually carried out at the mint, but this seems a rather more crude cut - perhaps someone in desperate need of small change.
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Finn235's Avatar
United States
6130 Posts
 Posted 09/24/2017  8:12 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Finn235 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Fascinating history @Cooperton

Also sorry for not replying earlier TNG... I had my post typed out days ago and had very little time this morning. The Nahapana drachms are more common than any of the later western satraps, but are still more valued because you don't need to learn the script to identify it. Can't remember where, but I think I recall reading that something like 10,000-20,000 western satrap drachms total have been recovered. If ebay sales are representative, Nahapana's drachms make about 10-15% of the total, including his couple dozen successors.

On the subject, here is my rarest Kshatrapa drachm, Visvasimha as Mahakshatrapa, ca. 282 AD

49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins

Their history is lost, but Visvasimha seems to have been the heir apparent to his father, Rudrasena II. He issued coins jointly with his father using the lesser title of Kshatrapa (maha- means "great"), then *very* briefly as Mahakshatrapa, but then he appears to have been deposed or replaced by his brother Bhartradaman. Scholars are divided on whether Bhartradaman usurped power, or whether Visvasimha was exiled and then later attempted a rebellion.
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bd251's Avatar
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1844 Posts
 Posted 09/25/2017  12:00 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bd251 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
1830 half dollar 4,764,800
49-Days-Of-Low-Mintage-US-And-World-Coins
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