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  2. Ducat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducat

    Austrian gold ducat depicting Kaiser Franz-Josef, c. 1910. The ducat (/ ˈ d ʌ k ə t /) coin was used as a trade coin in Europe from the later Middle Ages to the 19th century. Its most familiar version, the gold ducat or sequin containing around 3.5 grams (0.11 troy ounces) of 98.6% fine gold, originated in Venice in 1284 and gained wide international acceptance over the centuries.

  3. Thaler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thaler

    Some of these coins reached colossal size, as much as sixteen normal thalers, exceeding a full pound (over 450 g) of silver and being over 12 cm (5 in) in diameter. The name Löser most likely was derived from a large gold coin minted in Hamburg called the portugalöser, worth 10 ducats, which were based on Portuguese 10-ducat coins. [3]

  4. Italian scudo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_scudo

    Papal States, Quadruple Scudo d'Oro (1689) depicting Pope Alexander VIII (obv) and Saints Peter and Paul (rev). The scudo (pl. scudi) was the name for a number of coins used in various states in the Italian peninsula until the 19th century.

  5. Dutch rijksdaalder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_rijksdaalder

    17th century rijksdaalder was set to be equal to from 48 to 50 stuivers (the Dutch equivalent of shillings) and circulated along with silver florins (28 stuivers), daalders (30 stuivers), leeuwendaalders (36 to 42 stuivers; 27.68 g, 0.743 fine), silver ducats (48 stuivers; 28.06 g, 0.868 fine), and ducatons (60 stuivers; 32.46 g, 0.938 fine) [1 ...

  6. Sequin (coin) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequin_(coin)

    Initially called "ducat" (ducato), for the ruling Doge of Venice who was prominently depicted on it, it was called the zecchino, after the Zecca of Venice, since 1543 when Venice began minting a silver coin also called a ducat.

  7. Two Sicilies ducat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two_Sicilies_ducat

    The ducat was the main currency of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies between 1816 and 1860. When the Congress of Vienna created the kingdom merging the Kingdom of Naples and the Kingdom of Sicily, the ducat became at par a continuation of the Neapolitan ducat and the Sicilian piastra issued prior to 1816, although the Sicilian piastra had been subdivided into 240 grana.

  8. Italian lira - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_lira

    The piastra of Naples and Sicily in 1861, at 1 piastra = 1.2 ducat di regno = 5.1 Neapolitan lire, the latter at par with the Italian lira; and; The scudo of Rome and the Papal States in 1866, at 1 scudo = 5.375 Papal lire, the latter at par with the Italian lira.

  9. Maltese scudo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maltese_scudo

    These included Spanish dollars, Venetian lira, Louis d'or and other currencies. [ 3 ] During the French occupation of Malta in 1798, the French authorities melted down some of the silver from the island's churches and struck them into 15 and 30 tarì coins from the 1798 dies of Grandmaster Hompesch.

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