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Series: Russian ballet: Russian ballet: 19 April 1993 5111-0004 3 rubles 40,000 [38] Russian ballet: 19 April 1993 5111-0005 3 rubles 125,000 [39] Russian ballet: 19 April 1993 5115-0001 25 rubles 10,000 [40] Russian ballet: 19 April 1993 5214-0001 10 rubles 11,500 [41] Russian ballet: 19 April 1993 5214-0002 10 rubles 57,500 [42] Russian ...
Old coins are going for big bucks on eBay, and we found a few that you might just have lying around. Check out the slideshow above to discover if any of the coins you've collected could rake in ...
Capped Bust Gold Eagle: MS-63+ CAC United States GreatCollections [32] May 2023 $2,640,000 1825 Constantine ruble Russian Empire: Stack's Bowers [33] April 6, 2021 $2,585,000 1792 Birch Cent: MS-65 CAC United States Garrett, Partrick Heritage Auctions [34] January 2015 $2,585,000 1795 $10 Capped Bust Right Eagle - 13 leaves MS-66+ United States
50 rubles - gold - 60th anniversary of victory in World War II - 2005; 3 rubles - bi-metallic brass/cupronickel - 300th anniversary Monetary Reform/Peter I - 2004; 10 rubles - bi-metallic brass/cupronickel - Dmitrov - 2004; 1 ruble - silver - Asiatic wild dog - 2005; 10 rubles - base metal - Kaliningrad - 2005
The Russian George the Victorious (Russian: монета Георгий Победоносец) is a bullion coin issued in gold and silver by the Central Bank of Russia. Mintage began in 2006 with quarter-troy ounce (7.78g) gold coins with a face value of 50 rubles and later in 2009 a one-troy ounce silver coin was introduced with a face value ...
On History Channel's hit show "Pawn Stars," a man came in to sell a 1907 Saint-Gaudens double eagle $20 gold coin. The coins are extremely rare, and some of them have sold for more than $1 million ...
Under United States law, coins that do not meet the legal tender requirement cannot be marketed as "coins". Instead, they must be advertised as rounds. [3] Bullion coins are typically available in various weights, usually multiples or fractions of 1 troy ounce, but some bullion coins are produced in very limited quantities in kilograms or heavier.
Under Nicolas II, the finance minister Sergei Witte conducted a currency reform [19] and 10-ruble gold coin (Nicolas II chervonets) started to be used in parallel with gold imperial (15-ruble gold coin) as a principal legal tender of the Russian golden standard. The mintage of 10 ruble coins from 1897 to 1911 was over 40 million pieces.