enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Great Bullion Famine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Bullion_Famine

    The main cause for the bullion famine was outflow of silver to the East unequaled by European mining output. [1] [2] The historian John Day supports this theory, stating the loss of gold and silver was due to large-scale trading with the Levant, which provided Europe spices, silks, rare dyestuffs, pearls, and precious gems. [3]

  3. Crown (British coin) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown_(British_coin)

    The Kingdom of England also minted gold Crowns until early in the reign of Charles II. [2] The dies for all gold and silver coins of Queen Anne and King George I were engraved by John Croker, a migrant originally from Dresden in the Duchy of Saxony. [3] The British silver crown was always a large coin, and from the 19th century it did not ...

  4. Crown gold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown_gold

    Crown gold is a 22 karat (kt) gold alloy used in the crown coin introduced in England in 1526 (by Henry VIII). [1] In this alloy, the proportion of gold is 22 parts out of 24 (91.667% gold). Crown gold is appreciably less prone to wear than the softer 23 kt gold of earlier gold sovereigns — an important point for coins intended for everyday ...

  5. Crown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown

    Crown of King of Persis Ardakhshir II, 1st century BC. Crowns have been discovered in pre-historic times from Haryana, India. [4] The precursor to the crown was the browband called the diadem, which had been worn by the Achaemenid Persian emperors. It was adopted by Constantine I and was worn by all subsequent rulers of the later Roman Empire ...

  6. Gold crown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_crown

    Gold crown may refer to: Crown (British coin) Geumgwan(Korean: 금관; Hanja: 金 冠), royal gold crowns of Gaya and Silla. Gold Crown Tomb (Geumgwanchong), a Silla tumulus located in modern-day Gyeongju, South Korea. Gold Crown of Merit; Full gold crown in Dentistry.

  7. Crown (English coin) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown_(English_coin)

    The first English silver crown, that of Edward VI (fine silver, 41mm, 30.78 g, 9h; third period) The crown, originally known as the "crown of the double rose", was an English coin introduced as part of King Henry VIII's monetary reform of 1526, with a value of 1 ⁄ 4 of one pound, or five shillings, or 60 pence.

  8. Grill (jewelry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grill_(jewelry)

    A gold crown. Grills can imitate and are not mutually exclusive with gold teeth, a form of permanent dental prosthesis in which the visible part of a tooth is replaced or capped with gold. Grills has its roots in the Southern U.S. This was a cultural element of poor African-American people who couldn’t afford the proper dental work.

  9. Hierarchy of precious substances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchy_of_precious...

    The measurement of sales of popular music starts high relative to the wedding anniversary scale, concentrating on gold and platinum (see gold album).Likewise, credit card companies usually have a "gold card" and a "platinum card" (many formerly had a "silver card" then followed by a "gold card", but due to similarity in appearance between silver and platinum these were often discontinued with ...