Difference between revisions of "Venezuela 1902 2 bolivares"
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* [[Venezuela 1903 bolivar|1903 bolivar]] | * [[Venezuela 1903 bolivar|1903 bolivar]] | ||
* [[Venezuela 1902 5 bolivares|1902 5 bolivares]] | * [[Venezuela 1902 5 bolivares|1902 5 bolivares]] | ||
| − | * [[Venezuela | + | * [[Venezuela 1903 2 bolivares|1903 2 bolivares]] |
* [[Coins and currency dated 1902]] | * [[Coins and currency dated 1902]] | ||
* return to [[Venezuela]] | * return to [[Venezuela]] | ||
[[Category: Selections from Heritage sale 3010]] | [[Category: Selections from Heritage sale 3010]] | ||
Latest revision as of 21:01, 3 March 2023
Venezuela fully adopted a decimal coinage system in 1871, with 100 centavos = 1 venezuelano. By 1879, denominations were renamed centimos and bolivares, such that 100 centimos = 1 bolivar. A crown was equivalent to five 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 1902 two bolivares, minted in Philadelphia. The denomination is shown on the reverse as GRAM.10. It was lot 21964 in Heritage sale 3010 (Boston, August, 2010) where it sold for $977.50. The catalog description reads: "Republic 2 Bolivares 1902, AU55 PCGS. Deeply toned and with well defined details. Quite scarce in higher grades."
Recorded mintage: 500,000.
Specifications: 10.0 g, 0.835 fine silver, 0.2695 oz ASW.
Catalog reference: KM Y23.
- 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.
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