Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Numismatically or historically, maybe those Confederate bills are worth something."
These coins have been for the most part numismatically worthless, except for some silver and gold commemoratives.
Numismatically, Charles I's reign is without doubt the most interesting and complicated of any English monarch.
Numismatically, the term "crown-sized" is used generically to describe large silver or cupro-nickel coins of about 40 mm in diameter.
Meanwhile, history is being made, numismatically: for $9.95, a commercial is now offering real, honest-to-goodness quarters that replace George Washington's face with color images bearing Rodriguez's.
This means archaeologically and numismatically that at least one, but probably two minimum, of the three hoards post-date de Vaux's suggestion of a burial date after 9/8 BCE.
Numismatically speaking, this can be likened to the period of Hephthalite and Turk Shahi sovereignty over Sogdiana, during which civic bronze coinage circulated alongside of silver drachms referencing a Hunnic or Turkic overlord (the Bukharkhoda).
The reign of Edward VI though short (1547-1553) was numismatically important for seeing the introduction of new denominations - the silver crown, half crown, shilling, Sixpence, and Threepence - which were to survive until 1971, and which were a reflection of the increasing wealth of the country.
This is due to a number of factors: the higher unit cost of the Sovereign (at under one-quarter of an ounce); the higher demand for the Sovereign from numismatists (compared to the Krugerrand which is not sought-after numismatically); and the higher costs of identifying and stocking a numismatic coin.