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Value: 0.20 Philippine peso: Mass: 4 g: Diameter: 20.00 mm: Edge: Reeded: Composition: 75% silver, 25% copper: Years of minting: 1880–1945: Obverse; Design: The standing figure of an adolescent female was utilized. She is clad in a long, flowing gown and holds in her right hand a hammer, resting atop an anvil, as seen on the minor coins.
The statement of value appears above her (Ten, Twenty, and/or Fifty Centavos) in English, while the name of the archipelago is written below in Spanish as FILIPINAS. [15] [c] 3,500,000 3,750,000 2,500,000 31,592,000 137,208,000 1937 M 1938 M 1941 M 1944 D 1945 D 20 centavos: 20 mm 1.9 mm 4 g 2,665,000 3,000,000 1,500,000 28,596,000 82,804,000 ...
20.0 g 90% silver 50 centavos: 1947 Liberation of the Philippines by Gen. Douglas MacArthur: 200,000 27.5 mm ... 90% gold: Reeded Map of the Philippines, value
Concurrent with these events is the establishment of the Casa de Moneda de Manila in the Philippines in 1857, the mintage starting 1861 of gold 1, 2 and 4 peso coins according to Spanish standards (the 4-peso coin being 6.766 grams of 0.875 gold), and the mintage starting 1864 of fractional 50-, 20- and 10-céntimo silver coins also according ...
According to the Professional Coin Grading Service, here’s what five high-value quarters from the year 2000 went for at auction: Massachusetts 2000-P (Philadelphia mint) MS69: $3,760 Maryland ...
Ten Centavos (1920–1921, 1929, 1935, 1937–1938, and 1941) Twenty Centavos (1920–1921, 1928–1929, 1937–1938, and 1941) Fifty Centavos (1920–1921 and 1936 Commemorative) One Peso (1936 Commemorative only, with two varieties) Leper Colony Coinage (struck in aluminum 1920 and brass all later years) One Centavo (1927 and 1930) Five ...
However, following the release of the 20-centimo coin in 1864, a 25-centimo denomination was not issued until the end of the Spanish and American administrations. The first coin of independent Philippines to be valued a quarter of a peso was issued in 1958 as twenty-five centavos (the name for the sub-unit under American rule). Its obverse ...
50 centavos issued under US rule, 1907-1945. In 1903 the 50-centavo coin equivalent to 1/4th a U.S. dollar was minted for the Philippines, weighing 13.48 grams of 0.9 fine silver. Its specifications were reduced from 1907 to 10.0 grams of 0.75 fine silver; this was minted until 1945.