1999 Canadian 10-Cent (Dime) Value Guide
What is your 1999 Canadian dime worth? Complete price guide covering the standard nickel, the rare "P" plated steel test token ($10–$120+ CAD certified), and sterling silver proof — all values in CAD as of early 2026.
The 1999 Canadian dime exists in three distinct compositions. Most circulated examples are worth face value ($0.10 CAD), but the rare "P" plated steel test token is worth $10–$120+ CAD depending on grade, and the sterling silver proof fetches $10–$40 CAD.
- Circulated Nickel (G4–AU58):$0.10 (face value)
- Gem Nickel (MS-65):$10–$15
- Superb Gem Nickel (MS-67):$50–$80+
- "P" Plated Steel — Raw/Uncertified:$10–$20
- "P" Plated Steel — Gem Certified (MS-65/PL-65):$30–$50
- "P" Plated Steel — Superb Gem Certified (MS-67+):$70–$120
- Proof-Like Nickel (PL-67):$30
- Specimen Nickel (SP-67):$40
- Sterling Silver Proof (PF-65):$15
All values in CAD as of early 2026. Three quick checks answer 90% of questions: (1) Look for a small "P" mark directly below the Queen's bust — if present, you have the rare plated steel variety. (2) Apply a magnet — if the coin does not stick, you have the non-magnetic sterling silver proof. (3) Weigh it on a precise scale — 2.07 g = standard nickel; ~1.77 g = the "P" plated steel variety; 2.40 g = silver proof. See full value chart →
The 1999 Canadian 10-cent coin sits at a pivotal crossroads in Royal Canadian Mint history. It was the final full year of the traditional 99.9% pure nickel dime — a composition Canada had used since 1968 — while simultaneously marking the real-world debut of Multi-Ply Plated Steel (MPPS) technology through a limited "P"-marked test issue distributed to the vending industry. A sterling silver proof was also produced for collector sets. This three-way metallurgical split — 258 million common nickel coins versus roughly 20,000 plated steel test tokens — makes the 1999 dime one of the most strategically layered modern Canadian coins for collectors and investors alike. The obverse carries the Third Portrait of Queen Elizabeth II by sculptor Dora de Pédery-Hunt, and the reverse features Emanuel Hahn's iconic Bluenose schooner. For a comprehensive look at all Canadian dime years, see our Canadian Dime Value Guide.
Note: Errors such as die rotation strikes exist for 1999 dimes but are outside the scope of this standard value guide.
1999 Canadian 10-cent coin: Third Portrait obverse by Dora de Pédery-Hunt (Queen Elizabeth II wearing the Diamond Diadem) and the Bluenose schooner reverse by Emanuel Hahn.
1999 Canadian Dime Composition & Specifications
The 1999 dime is unique among modern Canadian coins in that three metallurgically distinct versions were struck in the same year. Identifying which version you hold is the most critical step in determining value — and weight is your most reliable diagnostic tool.
Comparative Specifications
| Feature | Standard Nickel | "P" Plated Steel | Silver Proof |
|---|---|---|---|
| Charlton Catalogue | 183.1 | 183b | 183a |
| Composition | 99.9% Nickel | Steel core; copper & nickel layers | 92.5% Silver, 7.5% Copper |
| Weight | 2.07 g | ~1.77 g | 2.40 g |
| Diameter | 18.03 mm | 18.03 mm | 18.03 mm |
| Magnetic? | Yes | Yes | No |
| Visual Marker | None | Small "P" below bust | None |
Standard Nickel (Charlton 183.1)
The workhorse of Canadian commerce in 1999, this coin is 99.9% pure nickel. Nickel is a hard metal — harder than the bronze alloys used in earlier Canadian coins — which means it resists wear well but also means coins sustain bag marks (surface contact abrasions from other coins in mint bags) very readily. This bag-mark tendency is the primary reason high-grade certified examples are scarcer than the enormous 258,462,000 mintage might suggest. The coin is strongly magnetic. No melt value calculation is provided in the source data for this composition.
"P" Plated Steel Variety (Charlton 183b)
The MPPS composition uses a low-carbon steel core plated with alternating layers of copper and nickel. While it looks nearly identical to the standard nickel coin under casual inspection, its lower mass (~1.77 g vs. 2.07 g) makes a precise scale the single most reliable identifier. The coin is also strongly magnetic due to the ferrous steel core — so magnetism alone cannot distinguish it from standard nickel. The definitive non-destructive authentication hierarchy is: (1) weigh it, (2) look for the "P" mark.
Sterling Silver Proof (Charlton 183a)
Found exclusively in the 1999 Proof Set collector issue, this coin is struck in 92.5% silver (sterling) with 7.5% copper. At 2.40 g, it is the heaviest of the three varieties. Critically, it is non-magnetic — making a simple magnet test an instant differentiator between the silver proof and both magnetic base-metal versions. The document notes that the coin's value is driven primarily by its silver content and the aesthetic appeal of its Deep Cameo finish.
⚠️ Weight Is Your Primary Diagnostic
A precise gram scale (accurate to 0.01 g) is the single most important tool for 1999 dime authentication. Both the nickel and plated steel coins are magnetic and look nearly identical — only the weight separates them definitively. A coin at 2.07 g is standard nickel (common); a coin at ~1.77 g is the rare "P" plated steel variety; a coin at 2.40 g is the silver proof.
Three-way weight comparison: standard nickel (2.07 g), "P" plated steel (1.77 g), and sterling silver proof (2.40 g). Weight is the definitive authentication test. (Illustration — not a photo of your exact coins)
1999 Canadian Dime Value Chart by Grade & Finish
The 1999 dime market is sharply bifurcated: the standard nickel issue is a commodity coin in circulated grades, while certified examples of the "P" variety and high-grade nickel strikes occupy a completely different value tier. Four separate tables follow, each covering a distinct variety or finish.
1999 Canadian Dime — Business Strike (Nickel Circulation)
With a mintage of 258,462,000, the standard 1999 nickel dime is entirely determined by condition. In circulated grades it is a commodity coin trading at face value. The value cliff begins at MS-65, with the true investment grade starting at MS-67. Because nickel is a hard metal prone to bag marks, MS-68 examples are described as virtually non-existent in this composition.
| Grade | Description | Value (CAD) |
|---|---|---|
| Circulated (G4–AU58) | Worn; lackluster | $0.10 (face value) |
| MS-60 to MS-63 | Uncirculated; noticeable bag marks | $0.25–$1.00 |
| MS-64 | Average Uncirculated; entry-level collector | $2.00–$5.00 |
| MS-65 | Gem Uncirculated; strong luster, few marks | $10.00–$15.00 |
| MS-66 | Choice Gem; minimal marks, clean cheek | $20.00–$40.00 |
| MS-67 | Superb Gem; virtually flawless under 5× magnification | $50.00–$80.00+ |
| MS-68 | Flawless; virtually non-existent in nickel | $150.00–$300.00+ |
Grading focal points: the Queen's cheekbone, eyebrow, and tiara jewels are the highest-relief areas and first to show bag marks or chatter. A coin cannot grade MS-65 or higher if distracting marks are present on the cheek. See NGC KM 183 price guide for registry-level population context.
⚠️ Never Clean Your Coins
Cleaning strips original luster and leaves hairlines visible under magnification. A cleaned 1999 dime receives a "Details — Cleaned" designation from any grading service and loses all numismatic premium, regardless of the underlying die quality or how brilliant it appears to the naked eye.
Grade spectrum for the 1999 Canadian nickel dime: circulated (face value) through MS-67 Superb Gem ($50–$80+). The grading focal point is the Queen's cheek — even light contact marks here prevent MS-65+ grades. (Illustration — not a photo of your exact coin)
1999 Canadian Dime — "P" Plated Steel Variety (Charlton 183b)
The 1999 "P" dime is the key date variety of the modern Canadian dime series. With a mintage of approximately 20,000 Test Sets distributed to collectors, it occupies a genuine scarcity tier. Raw (uncertified) examples removed from sets typically trade between $10.00 and $20.00 CAD. Certified examples command substantial premiums, especially as original vinyl packaging continues to inflict haze damage on unprotected coins over time.
Note that grading services may label these coins either MS (PCGS/NGC) or PL (ICCS) at the same underlying quality level, reflecting the coin's Proof-Like finish from the Test Set production process. The harder steel core can also produce weaker strikes; a "Full Strike" example with crisp, unbroken lines in the Bluenose's sails carries additional desirability.
| Grade Tier | Certification Status | Value (CAD) |
|---|---|---|
| Any grade | Raw / Uncertified (from set) | $10.00–$20.00 |
| MS-63 / PL-63 | Certified | $15.00 |
| MS-65 / PL-65 | Certified Gem | $30.00–$50.00 |
| MS-67+ / PL-67+ | Certified Superb Gem | $70.00–$120.00 |
MS-66/PL-66 examples represent the recommended entry point for investment-grade collecting per the source document, falling between the MS-65 and MS-67 value tiers above. For NGC population and pricing data on the "P" variety, see the NGC KM 183b price guide. Detailed variety background is also covered by Calgary Coin's 10-cent reference.
1999 Canadian Dime — Collector Finishes: Proof-Like (PL) & Specimen (SP)
Two distinct collector finishes were produced for the 1999 nickel dime. The Proof-Like (PL) coins came from the annual Uncirculated Set (red packaging, 192,139 units), the O Canada! Gift Set (77,985 units), and the Tiny Treasures Gift Set (63,377 units). The Specimen (SP) coins came from the book-style Specimen Set (91,890 units). Despite being significantly scarcer than the 258-million circulation strike, both finishes are far more common than the "P" plated steel variety.
| Finish | Mintage (Sets) | MS/PL/SP-63 | MS/PL/SP-65 | MS/PL/SP-67 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proof-Like (PL) — Nickel | 192,139 (Unc. Set) + gift sets | $1.00 | $5.00 | $30.00 | All brilliant (fields and devices). PVC packaging risk — see callout below. |
| Specimen (SP) — Nickel | 91,890 | $2.00 | $10.00 | $40.00 | Matte/striated fields; brilliant relief. Subtle cameo contrast. Leatherette book packaging. |
Standard PL coins in grades below PL-67 trade for $1.00–$3.00 — barely above face value for common grades. The value jump to PL-67 is dramatic and constitutes the meaningful collector threshold for this finish. SP coins offer slightly better value at lower grades due to their smaller mintage.
⚠️ PVC Damage Risk — PL Coins Especially
The RCM issued 1999 Uncirculated and Test Sets in soft vinyl (PVC-laden) pliofilm packaging. Over decades, plasticizers react with the metal surface, producing a greenish oily film or haze. A heavily hazed coin is considered impaired and reverts toward face value. If you own raw PL coins still in the original soft plastic, transfer them to chemically inert hard plastic capsules (Air-Tites) or PET Mylar 2×2 flips. Do not use nail polish remover — pure acetone only, applied by a professional conservator.
1999 Canadian Dime — Sterling Silver Proof (Charlton 183a)
The sterling silver proof was included in the 1999 Proof Set (90,249 units sold). It is struck in 92.5% silver with 7.5% copper, making it the heaviest of the three varieties at 2.40 g. The finish is Deep Cameo: heavily frosted devices against deep mirror fields. This coin's value is driven by both its silver content and the aesthetic quality of its finish. It is immediately identifiable as non-magnetic — a quick magnet test distinguishes it from all other 1999 dime varieties.
| Finish | Mintage (Sets) | PF-65 | PF-67 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proof (Deep Cameo) — Sterling Silver | 90,249 | $15.00 | $40.00 | Non-magnetic. Frosted devices, mirror fields. Value driven by silver content + cameo quality. General range: $10–$20 typical. |
See NGC KM 183a price guide for additional population data on the silver proof. The Royal Canadian Mint's official 10-cent page provides historical context for the denomination series.
All values in CAD represent typical market prices as of early 2026, based on compiled auction realizations and retail trends. For the complete denomination price guide across all years, see our Canadian Dime Value Guide.
Most Valuable 1999 Canadian Dime Varieties
The 1999 dime's variety landscape is driven entirely by composition and mintage scarcity, not die varieties. No widely recognized die sub-varieties (doubled dies, bead varieties, rotated-die premiums) are documented for this year. The two key collectible variants are the "P" plated steel test token and the sterling silver proof.
1. The 1999 "P" Test Token — The Premier Modern Key Date
Charlton 183b | Mintage: ~20,000 | Value: $15–$120+ CAD certified
The 1999 "P" dime is the most significant non-error variety in the modern Canadian dime series. Its origin was functional rather than numismatic: the RCM needed to distribute the new Multi-Ply Plated Steel planchets to vending machine manufacturers across North America so they could recalibrate coin-acceptance mechanisms. A limited number of these test coins were subsequently released by the RCM as official collector "Test Sets" — a move that prevented a grey market from forming around coins that had leaked from the vending calibration program.
The mintage of approximately 20,000 places the "P" dime in genuine scarcity territory. For perspective, the document notes it is comparable in mintage to the famous 1948 Canadian silver dollar (18,780 struck) — though an important distinction applies: nearly every 1948 dollar circulated, while nearly every 1999 "P" dime was saved in its original set. This means the supply of high-grade "P" dimes is proportionally much higher, which suppresses its value relative to the 1948 dollar. Still, as the ancestor of all modern Canadian plated coinage, its long-term significance is assured.
ℹ️ The Haze Problem and Investment Grade
As original vinyl "Test Set" packaging continues to chemically attack coin surfaces over the coming decades, the population of truly pristine 1999 "P" dimes will shrink. Certified (slabbed) examples graded early — before haze developed — or professionally conserved examples carry a significant premium over coins still in original raw packaging. For the best investment potential, the source document recommends PCGS or ICCS holders at grades of MS-66 / PL-66 or higher.
Location of the "P" mark on the 1999 Canadian dime: the small letter appears directly below the truncation of Queen Elizabeth II's effigy on the obverse. This is the primary visual identifier for the plated steel variety.
PVC/vinyl haze damage: a coin affected by plasticizers from original pliofilm packaging (left) versus a clean, unaffected surface (right). Heavily hazed coins are considered impaired and trade near face value. Store in inert capsules to prevent this. (Illustration — not a photo of your exact coins)
2. Sterling Silver Proof — Charlton 183a
Mintage: 90,249 | Value: $10–$40 CAD (PF-65–PF-67)
The silver proof is not a die variety but a distinct composition and finish variant. It is the most accessible entry point into 1999 dime collecting, offering genuine silver content and superior aesthetic quality (Deep Cameo) at a relatively modest price. With a mintage of 90,249, it is significantly scarcer than the 258-million nickel circulation issue — but more common than the "P" variety.
Note on Die Rotation
Die rotation (where the reverse is not aligned at the standard medal position) is classified as an error, not a variety, and is outside the scope of this guide. Collectors of non-error specimens should confirm their coin displays proper Medal Alignment (↑↑).
1999 Canadian Dime Identification Guide
30-Second Authentication Checklist
Use this checklist to determine exactly which 1999 dime you have — and which value table applies.
- Monarch Check: The obverse should show Queen Elizabeth II's Third Portrait, designed by Canadian sculptor Dora de Pédery-Hunt. This portrait (used from 1990 to 2003) shows the Queen wearing the Diamond Diadem, with "ELIZABETH II" above and "D. G. REGINA" below. If the legend reads differently or the portrait style is clearly different, you may have a different year.
- Reverse Check: Confirm you see the Bluenose schooner with full rigging, ropes, and sails — designed by Emanuel Hahn. "CANADA" appears above and "10 CENTS" below.
- Date Check: Confirm the date reads 1999.
- Edge Check: The edge should be reeded (milled) — uniform parallel grooves. A smooth or plain edge would indicate a wrong-planchet scenario.
- "P" Mark Check (MOST IMPORTANT): Examine the obverse directly below the Queen's bust truncation under magnification. Is there a small letter "P"? If yes → you have Charlton 183b (plated steel variety). If no → proceed to the weight test.
- No standard mint marks appear on 1999 circulation or collector nickel coins. The "P" is the only documented mark for this year, and it appears exclusively on the plated steel variety.
- Weight Test (Definitive Diagnostic): Place the coin on a precise gram scale (0.01 g accuracy).
- 2.07 g → Standard 99.9% Nickel (Charlton 183.1) — common
- ~1.77 g → "P" Multi-Ply Plated Steel (Charlton 183b) — rare, valuable
- 2.40 g → Sterling Silver Proof (Charlton 183a) — collector issue
- Magnet Test (Composition Verification): Apply a magnet to the coin.
- Strongly magnetic: Either standard nickel or plated steel — use the weight test to distinguish.
- Non-magnetic: Sterling silver proof. This is an instant differentiator.
- Alignment Check: Hold the obverse upright. When flipped on the vertical axis, the reverse should also be upright — this is standard Medal Alignment (↑↑). Significant rotation from this position constitutes a die rotation error (out of scope for this guide).
- Finish Identification (THE CRITICAL STEP for collector coins):
- Business Strike (Circulation): Cartwheel luster that sweeps across the fields as you tilt the coin. May show bag marks and handling wear.
- Proof-Like (PL): Fully brilliant and shiny across both the fields and the relief — coins are struck on polished planchets but not to the deepest mirror standard. Came from the annual Uncirculated Set (red packaging), O Canada! Set, or Tiny Treasures Set.
- Specimen (SP): The fields display a distinctive matte, striated (lined) finish, while the devices (Queen and Bluenose) remain brilliant and shiny. This creates a subtle cameo contrast. Came from the book-style Specimen Set.
- Proof (Silver Only): Deep mirror fields with heavily frosted devices — the highest-quality finish. Came from the Silver Proof Set. Always non-magnetic for 1999.
Four finishes of the 1999 Canadian 10-cent coin side by side: Business Strike (cartwheel luster), Proof-Like (all brilliant), Specimen (matte fields, brilliant devices), and Silver Proof (deep mirror fields, heavy frost). (Illustration — not a photo of your exact coins)
Magnet test: both the standard nickel and "P" plated steel dimes are strongly magnetic (left). The sterling silver proof is non-magnetic (right) — an instant identifier. Use the weight test to distinguish nickel from plated steel among the magnetic examples. (Illustration — not a photo of your exact coins)
Grading the Nickel Business Strike — Key Focus Areas
For the standard nickel business strike, the grading focal points are the Queen's cheekbone, eyebrow, and the jewels in her tiara. These are the highest-relief areas and the first to show bag marks or light contact abrasion (called "chatter"). A coin cannot achieve MS-65 or higher if there are distracting marks in these focal zones. The ICCS is the domestic Canadian standard grading service; PCGS and NGC slabs are also widely accepted, with PCGS often commanding a slight premium among registry-set collectors.
1999 Canadian Dime Value FAQs
What is a 1999 Canadian dime worth?
It depends entirely on which of the three versions you have. Most 1999 Canadian dimes found in circulation are the standard 99.9% nickel issue (258,462,000 minted) and are worth $0.10 (face value) in circulated grades. In Gem Uncirculated condition (MS-65), a certified nickel example trades for $10–$15 CAD, climbing to $50–$80+ CAD at MS-67. The rare "P" plated steel variety (~20,000 produced) commands $30–$50 CAD at MS-65 certified, and $70–$120 CAD at MS-67+. The sterling silver proof trades for roughly $10–$20 CAD typically, up to $40 CAD at PF-67.
What is the 1999 "P" dime and why is it valuable?
The 1999 "P" dime (Charlton 183b) is a Multi-Ply Plated Steel coin — the Royal Canadian Mint's first plated steel 10-cent piece — distributed in limited Test Sets to vending machine manufacturers for calibration of coin-acceptance mechanisms transitioning from pure nickel to the new steel alloy. The RCM released approximately 20,000 sets to collectors, making it a genuine modern key date. Its value rests on low mintage, historical significance as the ancestor of all modern Canadian plated coinage, and the fact that its original vinyl packaging poses an ongoing haze risk that will reduce the population of pristine examples over time.
How do I tell if my 1999 dime is the rare "P" variety?
Three checks, in order: First, examine the obverse directly below the Queen's bust truncation under a loupe or strong magnifier — look for a small letter "P". Second, weigh the coin on a precise gram scale: ~1.77 g confirms the plated steel variety, while 2.07 g indicates standard nickel. Third, both are strongly magnetic, so a magnet test alone cannot distinguish them — always confirm with weight. If you find a "P" mark and the coin weighs approximately 1.77 g, you have the rare variety.
Is my 1999 Canadian dime made of silver?
Almost certainly not. The vast majority of 1999 Canadian dimes in existence are struck in 99.9% pure nickel — Canada shifted from silver to nickel dimes in 1968 and used nickel throughout 1999 for circulation. The sterling silver (92.5% silver) version was struck exclusively for the annual Proof Set and was never circulated. The quickest test: apply a magnet. If it sticks, you have nickel or plated steel (not silver). If it does not stick at all, you likely have the silver proof — confirm by weighing: the silver proof is 2.40 g.
What is the difference between a Proof-Like (PL) and Specimen (SP) 1999 dime?
Both are collector-quality finishes struck on specially prepared planchets, but they look and feel different. A Proof-Like (PL) coin is fully brilliant and shiny across both the fields (background) and the raised devices (Queen, ship) — it emerged from the annual Uncirculated Set (red packaging). A Specimen (SP) coin has a distinctive matte, striated (lined) finish on the fields with brilliant relief devices, creating a subtle cameo contrast — it came from the book-style Specimen Set. Both are nickel composition for 1999. SP coins command somewhat higher prices due to their lower mintage (91,890 vs. 192,139 for the Uncirculated Set alone).
Should I get my 1999 dime graded?
For the standard nickel dime, grading costs (approximately $15–$30 per submission) typically exceed the coin's value unless it grades MS-66 or higher — so submitting a common example is rarely economical. For the "P" plated steel variety, certified examples at MS-65+ carry significant premiums over raw coins, and the certification also protects against haze risk and provides authentication — making slabbing worthwhile for any example believed to be in Gem condition or better. ICCS is the domestic Canadian standard; PCGS slabs often command premiums in registry-set competition. NGC is also widely respected, though it tends to trade at a slight discount to PCGS for modern Canadian decimals.
What is "vinyl haze" and how does it affect a 1999 "P" dime's value?
"Vinyl haze" refers to the greenish, oily film that forms on coin surfaces when the plasticizers in PVC (polyvinyl chloride) soft plastic packaging chemically react with the metal over time. The original 1999 Test Sets were issued in soft vinyl pliofilm, which is PVC-laden. A coin stored in this packaging for 25+ years may show significant haze. If the chemical reaction has merely deposited a film, professional conservation with pure acetone may restore the surface. If the reaction has etched the metal, the damage is permanent — the coin receives a "Details — Environmental Damage" designation from any grading service and trades near face value, regardless of the underlying detail.
Is the 1999 "P" dime a good investment?
The source document identifies the 1999 "P" dime as having a stable market with a genuine floor price as the "first plated dime." Its historical significance as the ancestor of all modern Canadian plated coinage ensures ongoing collector interest. The long-term supply of pristine examples is projected to shrink as vinyl haze affects more raw coins — creating a classic supply-demand dynamic for certified survivors. The document's recommended investment strategy is to acquire certified examples at MS-66 / PL-66 or higher from PCGS or ICCS — grades where value cliffs are steeper and competition from registry-set collectors supports prices.
Why are high-grade 1999 nickel dimes rare despite 258 million being minted?
The paradox of the 1999 nickel dime is that its enormous mintage actually works against finding Gem examples. Pure nickel is a hard metal, but 258 million coins struck together in mint bags suffered enormous contact damage (bag marks, abrasions, chatter) during production, bagging, and distribution. The same conditions that produced 258 million coins produced 258 million opportunities for surface damage. The result is that MS-67 examples are genuinely rare finds, and MS-68 is described as virtually non-existent for this composition — a true condition rarity driven by the industrial reality of bulk coinage production.
Methodology & Sources
Values in this guide are drawn from the following primary sources, cross-referenced as of early 2026: the Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins (for variety attributions 183.1, 183b, 183a); NGC KM 183 Price Guide (nickel business strikes); NGC KM 183b Price Guide ("P" plated steel variety); NGC KM 183a Price Guide (silver proof); PCGS Population Report; Calgary Coin 10-cent variety reference; Royal Canadian Mint 1999 Annual Report (official set mintage data); RCM official 10-cent denomination page; and Numista catalogue entry for the 1999 dime. Values represent compiled auction realizations and retail trends and are subject to market fluctuation. This guide covers standard and variety issues only; error coins are outside scope.
A note on images: To help illustrate coin diagnostics and rare varieties — especially complex errors that are difficult to describe in text alone — this guide uses AI-generated images. All written values, diagnostics, and variety attributions have been manually reviewed against the cited sources above. While our editorial team works to ensure every image is accurate and helpful, AI-generated illustrations may occasionally misrepresent fine details. If you spot any discrepancy between an image and its written description, please contact us or leave a comment below — we review all feedback and correct errors promptly. Numismatic knowledge is a community effort, and your input helps us build a more accurate resource for everyone.
