Coin Identifier

Coin Encyclopedia

Search and identify coins from around the world — with country, denomination, metal, mint, history, and how to tell them apart.

Maundy Fourpence

Maundy Fourpence

The largest of the four Royal Maundy coins, a small silver fourpence descended in value from the medieval groat, struck annually for the monarch's ceremonial Maundy Thursday alms distribution.

British
Third Farthing

Third Farthing

An extremely small denomination worth one-twelfth of a penny, struck mainly to serve the currency needs of the British colony of Malta across the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

British
Austrian Gold Ducat

Austrian Gold Ducat

A traditional high-purity Austrian gold trade coin with centuries of history, still struck today by the Austrian Mint as an official restrike permanently dated 1915.

European
Maundy Threepence

Maundy Threepence

The third denomination of the Royal Maundy set, a small silver threepence given out in the monarch's annual pre-Easter alms ceremony, distinct from Britain's separate everyday circulating threepence.

British
Somalia Elephant Silver Coin

Somalia Elephant Silver Coin

A popular annually-redesigned bullion coin issued in the name of Somalia depicting an African elephant, part of a broader African Wildlife series struck by a German mint.

Africa & Oceania
Dutch Ducat

Dutch Ducat

A small, nearly pure gold coin showing an armored knight, minted for centuries by the Dutch provinces and later the Kingdom of the Netherlands as a trusted international trade coin.

European
Mexican 8 Reales Pillar Dollar

Mexican 8 Reales Pillar Dollar

Minted in colonial Mexico City from 1732 to the early 1770s, the pillar dollar's crowned globes and Pillars of Hercules design made it one of the most widely trusted silver trade coins in the world.

Latin American
Australian Penny (1930)

Australian Penny (1930)

Regarded as the key date of Australian pre-decimal coinage, the 1930 penny is famous for an exceptionally small mintage during the Great Depression.

Africa & Oceania
Chinese Hupeh Province Dragon Dollar

Chinese Hupeh Province Dragon Dollar

Silver dragon dollar struck by the Hupeh (Hubei) provincial mint in late Qing China, part of the wave of regional dragon-dollar coinage issued across the empire's provinces.

Asian
Constantine the Great Follis

Constantine the Great Follis

A bronze coin of Constantine the Great, the emperor who legalized Christianity and founded Constantinople, struck at numerous mints across a transforming empire.

Ancient
Canadian Maple Leaf (Gold)

Canadian Maple Leaf (Gold)

Introduced in 1979, the Canadian Gold Maple Leaf was one of the first .9999 pure gold bullion coins in the world and remains a benchmark product of the Royal Canadian Mint.

Bullion
Crown

Crown

Large British coin traditionally worth five shillings, historically struck in silver and famed for elaborate designs, now issued mainly as a cupro-nickel commemorative.

British
Chinese Fengtien Province Dragon Dollar

Chinese Fengtien Province Dragon Dollar

Silver dragon dollar struck by the provincial mint of Fengtien in Manchuria during the late Qing dynasty, notable for several rare dated varieties.

Asian
Chinese Cash Coin (Qing Dynasty 'Kangxi Tongbao')

Chinese Cash Coin (Qing Dynasty 'Kangxi Tongbao')

Classic cast bronze cash coin bearing the reign title of Emperor Kangxi, struck across many provincial mints during one of the longest reigns in Chinese history.

Asian
Reichsthaler

Reichsthaler

The standard large silver coin of the Holy Roman Empire and its constituent German states from the 16th century onward, whose name is the direct linguistic ancestor of the word 'dollar.'

European
Indian Gold Mohur

Indian Gold Mohur

The traditional high-value gold coin of the Indian subcontinent, struck for centuries by Mughal emperors, later by the British East India Company, British India, and various princely states.

Asian
German 3 Mark Silver

German 3 Mark Silver

A large silver coin of Imperial Germany, issued by the various constituent states with distinct rulers' portraits and commemorative designs.

European
Argentina 8 Reales

Argentina 8 Reales

Silver 8 reales struck after Argentina's 1810 independence movement, replacing the Spanish king's portrait with the revolutionary Sun of May and clasped hands design.

Latin American
Argentine 8 Escudos Gold (1813)

Argentine 8 Escudos Gold (1813)

An extremely rare gold coin from the earliest years of Argentine independence, struck briefly at Potosí under revolutionary authority and bearing the iconic Sun of May.

Latin American
German Empire 5 Mark

German Empire 5 Mark

A large silver crown of Imperial Germany bearing the portrait or arms of individual constituent states, unified under a common eagle reverse after German unification in 1871.

European
German 5 Mark Silver (Kaiserreich)

German 5 Mark Silver (Kaiserreich)

The 5 Mark was the largest circulating silver coin of the German Empire, issued by numerous constituent states and free cities, each with its own portrait or design under a common imperial system.

European
Austrian Corpus Christi Thaler

Austrian Corpus Christi Thaler

A devotional silver thaler struck by Austrian ecclesiastical authorities to mark the feast of Corpus Christi, blending religious procession imagery with the standard large-thaler format of the era.

European