World. Collection of coins






Over 10 years' experience specialising in German and Central European coins. Worked at Fritz Rudolf Künker GmbH.
| €260 | ||
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| €240 | ||
| €220 | ||
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A collection of 555 ungraded world coins from late 18th to early 20th century, featuring circulated copper, bronze and base‑metal issues from Europe, Asia, the Americas and former colonies, including British Empire coinage with royal portraits and legible legends and a mix of colonial, Dutch, French, German and Asian issues in circulated condition.
Description from the seller
A dense, mixed world coin accumulation showcasing a broad sweep of global numismatic history from the late 18th century through the mid-20th century, featuring circulated copper, bronze, and base-metal issues from Europe, Asia, the Americas, and former colonial territories. The assortment prominently includes British Empire coinage such as United Kingdom large pennies and halfpennies bearing the portraits of George III, George V, George VI, and Queen Victoria, with readable legends including BRITANNIA, ONE PENNY, HALF PENNY, GEORGIVS V DEI GRA REX, and VICTORIA D G BRITT REG F D. Several Victorian and Edwardian era bronzes display classic Britannia reverses, shield motifs, and seated allegorical designs associated with the Royal Mint in London and Birmingham issues of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Also visible are colonial and Commonwealth coins including Straits Settlements bronze denominations marked STRAITS SETTLEMENTS, GEORGE V KING EMPEROR, and ONE CENT, reflecting British administration in Southeast Asia. Netherlands East Indies copper issues are present, including a clearly labeled 1 Duit dated 1790 with VOC-era style script and wreath motifs, tied to early Dutch colonial coinage circulating in Indonesia. Additional European material includes Napoleonic-era and post-Napoleonic French copper coins, with readable fragments such as REPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE and wreath-enclosed numerals, as well as Germanic states and Austro-Hungarian copper featuring crowned eagles, shields, and denomination numerals common to 18th–19th century Central Europe.
Asian coinage appears throughout the lot, including Japanese bronze pieces with square central holes and kanji inscriptions consistent with Edo-period and Meiji-era circulation, Chinese cash-style coins with calligraphic characters and temple motifs, and later Asian bronzes bearing wreaths, numerals, and national emblems. Additional global issues include Latin American copper and bronze coins with liberty heads, wreath reverses, and national arms, as well as assorted European minors from Italy, Belgium, and the Netherlands identifiable by language fragments, portrait styles, and heraldic devices.
The collection shows a wide range of honest circulation wear, oxidation, and natural patina, including dark chocolate browns, green verdigris, and reddish copper tones typical of long-circulated bronze. Several coins remain housed in vintage cardboard and staple holders with handwritten annotations, indicating prior collector handling and attribution attempts. Dates visible across the assortment span from the 1700s through the early 1900s, with multiple monarch portraits, imperial legends, colonial references, and denomination styles represented.
This unsearched world coin hoard offers strong appeal to collectors of British Empire coinage, colonial issues, early European copper, Asian cash and bronze types, and global historical numismatics. Rich in geographic diversity, period variety, and authentic circulated character, the grouping provides substantial potential for further identification, attribution, and discovery across multiple countries, mints, and historical eras.
A dense, mixed world coin accumulation showcasing a broad sweep of global numismatic history from the late 18th century through the mid-20th century, featuring circulated copper, bronze, and base-metal issues from Europe, Asia, the Americas, and former colonial territories. The assortment prominently includes British Empire coinage such as United Kingdom large pennies and halfpennies bearing the portraits of George III, George V, George VI, and Queen Victoria, with readable legends including BRITANNIA, ONE PENNY, HALF PENNY, GEORGIVS V DEI GRA REX, and VICTORIA D G BRITT REG F D. Several Victorian and Edwardian era bronzes display classic Britannia reverses, shield motifs, and seated allegorical designs associated with the Royal Mint in London and Birmingham issues of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Also visible are colonial and Commonwealth coins including Straits Settlements bronze denominations marked STRAITS SETTLEMENTS, GEORGE V KING EMPEROR, and ONE CENT, reflecting British administration in Southeast Asia. Netherlands East Indies copper issues are present, including a clearly labeled 1 Duit dated 1790 with VOC-era style script and wreath motifs, tied to early Dutch colonial coinage circulating in Indonesia. Additional European material includes Napoleonic-era and post-Napoleonic French copper coins, with readable fragments such as REPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE and wreath-enclosed numerals, as well as Germanic states and Austro-Hungarian copper featuring crowned eagles, shields, and denomination numerals common to 18th–19th century Central Europe.
Asian coinage appears throughout the lot, including Japanese bronze pieces with square central holes and kanji inscriptions consistent with Edo-period and Meiji-era circulation, Chinese cash-style coins with calligraphic characters and temple motifs, and later Asian bronzes bearing wreaths, numerals, and national emblems. Additional global issues include Latin American copper and bronze coins with liberty heads, wreath reverses, and national arms, as well as assorted European minors from Italy, Belgium, and the Netherlands identifiable by language fragments, portrait styles, and heraldic devices.
The collection shows a wide range of honest circulation wear, oxidation, and natural patina, including dark chocolate browns, green verdigris, and reddish copper tones typical of long-circulated bronze. Several coins remain housed in vintage cardboard and staple holders with handwritten annotations, indicating prior collector handling and attribution attempts. Dates visible across the assortment span from the 1700s through the early 1900s, with multiple monarch portraits, imperial legends, colonial references, and denomination styles represented.
This unsearched world coin hoard offers strong appeal to collectors of British Empire coinage, colonial issues, early European copper, Asian cash and bronze types, and global historical numismatics. Rich in geographic diversity, period variety, and authentic circulated character, the grouping provides substantial potential for further identification, attribution, and discovery across multiple countries, mints, and historical eras.
