€112,63
This coin will make a gorgeous gift for anyone born on the Year of Ox and for a newborn in 2021.
Country – Australia
Year – 2021
Face Value – 1$
Metal – Silver .9999
Weight –1 oz
Size – 40,6 mm
Quality – Proof
Max mintage – 7500 coins
These 2021 coins celebrate the Year of the Ox, whose rule over every second year in the 12-year lunar cycle is said to influence people born during 1949, 1961, 1973, 1985, 1997, 2009 and 2021. Each coin’s reverse portrays a charming image of an ox and its calf with a cherry blossom tree, a symbol of love and beauty. The design includes the inscription OX 2021, the Chinese character for ‘ox’ and The Perth Mint’s ‘P’ mintmark.
Out of stock
Country Australia
Face Value 1 Dollar
Year 2023
Material Silver
Purity 9999.0000
Mintage Mint-to-Order
Size/Diameter 40,60 mm
Weight 31.107
A perfect gift for someone born in the years 1907, 1919, 1931, 1943, 1955, 1967, 1979, 1991 ,2003 and 2015!
Specifications
Metal – .999 Silver
Denomination – 2 Dollars
Weight (g) – 31,1 (1 Oz)
Size (mm) – 35 x 45
Year of Issue – 2015
Country – Tokelau
Mintage – 2,015
pcs
Quality – Proof
Package type includes – box , special capsule and a Certificate of Authenticity
The coin reverse depicts a majestic Goat surrounded by the five natural elements of chinese tradition: fire, water, earth, wood and air.Issued as legal tender of Tokelau, the coin depicts the Raphael Maklouf effigy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse and the monetary denomination.
Country: Cook Islands
Year: 2013
Face value: 5 Dollars
Metal: .925 Silver
Weight: 20 g
Size: 38.61 mm
Quality: Proof
Mintage: 2500
The German artist Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528) was a great painter, but also an important engraver. One of his most famous works is the “Rhinoceros“ woodcut. Dürer used an Indian rhinoceros, which the Portuguese King Manuel I. received in 1515 as a gift from India, as his subject. This living Rhino caused a tremendous stir in the Court of Lisbon and far beyond. The exotic animal’s description, along with a rough sketch, reached Nuremberg by mail, and there it inspired Albrecht Dürer for his work – it should be noted that he had never seen such an animal himself.