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  2. List of most expensive coins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_expensive_coins

    List of most expensive coins Price Year Type Grade Issuing country Provenance Firm Date of sale $18,900,000 1933 1933 double eagle: MS-65 CAC United States: King Farouk of Egypt: Sotheby's [1] June 8, 2021 $12,000,000 1794 Flowing Hair dollar: SP-66 CAC United States Neil, Carter Private sale [2] January 24, 2013 $9,360,000 1787 Brasher ...

  3. Swedish krona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_krona

    The 1, 2 and 5 öre were in bronze, the 10, 25, 50 öre and 1 krona and 2 kronor were in silver, and the 10 and 20 kronor were in gold. Gold 5-kronor coins were added in 1881. In 1873 the Scandinavian Monetary Union currency was fixed so that 2,480 kronor purchased 1 kg of gold. In 2017 the price of gold is 365,289 kronor per kg.

  4. Icelandic króna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icelandic_króna

    Iceland's first coins were 10 and 25 aurar pieces introduced in 1922. These were followed in 1925 by 1 krona and 2 krona pieces and in 1926 by 1, 2 and 5 aurar pieces. In 1946, the coins' designs were altered to remove the royal monogram (CXR), following abolition of the Icelandic monarchy (which had formed a personal union with Denmark) in 1944.

  5. Talk:Swedish krona/Archives/2017 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Swedish_krona/...

    1 Reduction in value of circulating currency. 2 comments. 2 USD rates. 1 comment. 3 Outdated image. 2 comments. 4 Image of current banknotes. ... Talk: Swedish krona ...

  6. Scandinavian Monetary Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scandinavian_Monetary_Union

    The latter's conversion to 4.50 German gold marks (hence, 1 krone = 1.125 marks) established the gold parity of the krone: one gram of fine gold worth 2.79 marks was equivalent to 2.48 krone (or 0.4032 g gold per krone).

  7. Sweden and the euro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweden_and_the_euro

    In 1875 Norway joined this union. An equal valued krona of the monetary union replaced the three legacy currencies at the rate of 1 krona = ½ Danish rigsdaler = ¼ Norwegian speciedaler = 1 Swedish riksdaler. The new currency (krona) became a legal tender and was accepted in all three countries – Denmark, Sweden and Norway.

  8. Paper money of the Hungarian korona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paper_money_of_the...

    The banknotes (1, 2, 25 and 200 crowns) printed in Budapest under the Károlyi government and then under the Hungarian Soviet Republic were distinguished with a different serial number (1 K: higher than 7000; 2 K: higher than 7000; 25 K: higher than 3000; 200 K: higher than 2000). After the fall of the Soviet Republic, Vienna declared these ...

  9. Yugoslav krone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yugoslav_krone

    The dinar-krone ("krone on dinar") notes were printed as dinar and overprinted with krone at the prescribed ratio. Denominations issued were 2, 4, 20, 40, 80, 400 and 4,000 krone on 1 ⁄ 2, 1, 5, 10, 20, 100 and 1,000 dinar. [27] In total, 1.277 billion dinar were used for the exchange, which corresponds to 5.1 billion krone exchanged. [28]