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  2. Croeseid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croeseid

    Reducing the weight of the gold stater to 8.1 grams also allowed to simplify the exchange mechanism between gold and silver, as now 1 gold stater of 8.1 grams corresponded precisely in value to 10 silver staters of 10.7 grams, or to 20 silver coins of 5.35 grams (weight of the future Achaemenid Siglos), since the current exchange rate on a ...

  3. Alyattes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alyattes

    The weight of either precious metal could not just be weighed so they contained an imprint that identified the issuer who guaranteed the value of its contents. [31] Today we still use a token currency, where the value is guaranteed by the state and not by the value of the metal used in the coins. [32]

  4. Stater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stater

    The stater, as a Greek silver currency, first as ingots, and later as coins, circulated from the 8th century BC to AD 50. The earliest known stamped stater (having the mark of some authority in the form of a picture or words) is an electrum turtle coin, struck at Aegina [2] that dates to about 650 BC. [3]

  5. Hunting Rare Coins? 7 Strategies and Websites To ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/want-rare-coins-worth...

    The old cliché about finding rare and valuable coins is that you should start by digging around in your sofa. That's not necessarily bad advice. However, chances are the only loose change you'll ...

  6. Lydia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lydia

    The largest of these coins are commonly referred to as a 1/3 stater (trite) denomination, weighing around 4.7 grams, though no full staters of this type have ever been found, and the 1/3 stater probably should be referred to more correctly as a stater, after a type of a transversely held scale, the weights used in such a scale (from ancient ...

  7. Achaemenid coinage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achaemenid_coinage

    It seems that Cyrus initially adopted the Lydian coinage as such, and continued to strike Lydia's lion-and-bull Croeseid coinage. [7] The stater coins had a weight of 10.7 grams, a standard initially created by Croesus, which was then adopted by the Persians and became commonly known as the "Persic standard". [9]

  8. Ancient Greek coinage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_coinage

    The three most important standards of the ancient Greek monetary system were the Attic standard, based on the Athenian drachma of 4.3 grams (2.8 pennyweights) of silver, the Corinthian standard based on the stater of 8.6 g (5.5 dwt) of silver, that was subdivided into three silver drachmas of 2.9 g (1.9 dwt), and the Aeginetan stater or didrachm of 12.2 g (7.8 dwt), based on a drachma of 6.1 g ...

  9. Doctors Say This Is How You Can Loosen and Clear Mucus From ...

    www.aol.com/doctors-loosen-clear-mucus-chest...

    Several evidence-based natural remedies can help relieve chest congestion, says Joseph Mercola, D.O., board-certified family medicine osteopathic physician and author of Your Guide to Cellular ...

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