Identification of Coins.

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I'm sorry I have absolutely no information about these coins I just got my hands on them and hour ago. If anyone knows what these coins are, please do let me know. (Optional, not necessary:- in the condition that they are in what would be the approximate value)

 

The coins are numbered to refer for front and back.

 

To start off I’m not great with Asian coins so unfortunately I can’t help there but #2 is a 1979 one peso from the Dominican Republic I believe. #3 is 25 pence from Guernsey commemorating the royal visit in 1978.#4 is a silver round made to look like a Morgan dollar.#11 is a 1903 one peso from the Philippines under American rule. Thats all I know off the top of my head but I recommend downloading CoinSnap just don’t listen to the values 

Try Google lens

Referee of south atlantic islands

Chinese coins, probably a bunch of fake and some others are funny like this wedding on 1906

N#19363

Referee of south atlantic islands

Yes a lot look fake 

Heyyy! Thanks to the both of you. Good thing I didn't pay anything to the guy. I needed some confirmation. Thanks again!

SenhorDinheiro

Yes a lot look fake 

Hey thanks for your reply. Good thing I did not pay for those coins. Can I ask, on what basis are you judging that they're fake? Like are they replicas. Or they just never existed. 

The problem is that when there's a worm in the apple, like with the fake Saint Helena & Ascension coin, you can't trust a batch of coins. The copies of the "Fat Man" are infinitely more numerous than the genuine coins.

And then, as soon as you look closely at a coin from this batch, there's a problem. For example, how can there be so many traces of circulation on coin number 13, the Lady Diana wedding coin, which is a non-circulating coin? It's ridiculous.

Referee of south atlantic islands

Frenchlover

The problem is that when there's a worm in the apple, like with the fake Saint Helena & Ascension coin, you can't trust a batch of coins. The copies of the "Fat Man" are infinitely more numerous than the genuine coins.

And then, as soon as you look closely at a coin from this batch, there's a problem. For example, how can there be so many traces of circulation on coin number 13, the Lady Diana wedding coin, which is a non-circulating coin? It's ridiculous.

Makes sense. 

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