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The five-dollar coin is the second-highest-denomination coin of the Hong Kong dollar. It replaced the five-dollar banknote in 1976. It was first issued as a 10-sided coin in 1976, under British rule. The coin was also made of copper-nickel but weighed 10.76 grams, was 31 mm in diameter and 2.08 mm thick.
To mark the fifth year of the establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, the HKMA, on behalf of the Government, issued 60,000 limited edition coin set that consists of five HK$50 silver coins with a gold-plated inner core, and a 9999 pure gold medallion. The five silver coins are individually engraved with a phrase and symbol ...
The five-dollar note was first issued in 1858 by the Mercantile Bank, 1865 by the Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong), 1866 by the Oriental Bank Corporation, 1897 by The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, and 1894 by the National Bank of China.
H. Hong Kong fifty-cent coin; Hong Kong five-cent coin; Hong Kong five-dollar coin; Hong Kong one-cent coin; Hong Kong one-dollar coin; Hong Kong one-mil coin
Hong Kong issued a ten-sided 5 dollar coin from 1976 to 1979, [34] while the Philippines issued ten-sided two piso (peso) coins from 1983 to 1990. [35] Some other countries that have issued ten-sided circulation coins are Chile, [ 36 ] the Dominican Republic, [ 37 ] Jamaica [ 38 ] and Madagascar.
Hong Kong Mint (Chinese: 香港造幣廠) was a mint in Hong Kong that existed from 1866 to 1868. Located in Cleveland Street, Causeway Bay, it is the first coin mint of Hong Kong. A Mint Dam, on the slope of Mount Butler, was constructed to supply water to the mint. In early colonial Hong Kong, mixed
There's no shortage of interesting, old and rare European coins capable of commanding big money at auction -- but are any actually still in circulation and not being handled by private collectors ...
A number of gold Eastern Roman coins and 4 silver Sasanian coins. In July 1977 Reuters Hong Kong reported that a Chinese archeologist had discovered a number of gold coins from the Eastern Roman Empire, including 1 produced during the reign of Leo I. [30] The find also included 4 silver Persian coins dated to the Sasanian dynasty. [30]
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related to: 1883 gold 5 dollar coin hong kong