Difference between revisions of "Venezuela 1936 2 bolivares"

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m (Text replacement - "* [[Venezuela 1936 1/2 bolivar" to "* 1936 ¼ bolivar * [[Venezuela 1936 1/2 bolivar")
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* [[Venezuela 1936 5 centimos|1936 5 centimos]]
 
* [[Venezuela 1936 5 centimos|1936 5 centimos]]
 
* [[Venezuela 1936 12-1/2 centimos|1936 12½ centimos]]
 
* [[Venezuela 1936 12-1/2 centimos|1936 12½ centimos]]
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* [[Venezuela 1936 1/4 bolivar|1936 ¼ bolivar]]
 
* [[Venezuela 1936 1/2 bolivar|1936 ½ bolivar]]
 
* [[Venezuela 1936 1/2 bolivar|1936 ½ bolivar]]
 
* [[Cabo Blanco 1936 2 bolivares]] leper colony token
 
* [[Cabo Blanco 1936 2 bolivares]] leper colony token

Revision as of 20:05, 5 April 2022

from the Acanthite collection
from the Acanthite collection

Venezuela fully adopted a decimal coinage system in 1871, with 100 centavos = one venezuelano. By 1879, denominations were renamed centimos and bolivares, such that 100 centimos = one bolivar. A crown was equivalent to 5 bolivares. The official title of the country from 1864 was 'Estados Unidos de Venezuela', a name it would carry until 1953, when the constitution mandated a return to the name 'Republica de Venezuela'. Shown is a 1936 two bolivares, minted in Philadelphia. The denomination is shown on the reverse as GRAM.10. The portrait is of Simon Bolivar, as designed by Albert Barre.

Recorded mintage: 2,500,000.

Specifications: 10.0 g, 0.835 fine silver, 0.2695 oz ASW.

Catalog reference: Y 23.

Sources:

  • Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000, 47th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2019.
  • Stohr, Tomas, El Circulante en la Capitania General de Venezuela, Caracas, Banco Central de Venezuela, 1998.

Link to: