If you could get 100,000 only to buy 1 coin...

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If you could get 100,000 only to get one coin that you could not sell, what would it be?
I'd probably buy the 12 roubles platinum coin. It is a remarkable coin and has a great history.
$100,000 USD or 100,000 Zimbabwean dollars ($276 USD)? :D
Maybe something like this.
a 6 Taler coin minted after finding bigger amounts of silver ore at the St. Jakob mine in Zellerfeld.
This example was sold by Künker for 50.400€ (including auction charges)
If you like coins, medals and tokens with ship motives follow my new instagram account with regular updates @numisnautiker
From time to time I sell some coins on Ebay make sure to follow me @apuking on Ebay.
Mine would be very easy to solve.
It would be a GB 5 Guineas coin from around 1700. Any date would be acceptable.
I have every other GB face value coin from 1/4 farthing to 2 Guineas.
Received a catalogue 2 weeks ago and was valued at £57,000.
I'm just a collector of coins, not a slave to it, unless I am in a coin shop.
For all you banknote collectors. Link to my swap list.
https://colnect.com/en/banknotes/list/swap_list/COINMAN1
Something like this would be ok:
https://aukcjamonet.pl/product/6713/wladyslaw-lv-waza-donatywa-wagi-8-dukatow-1644-gdansk
ROMA AETERNA
A little over budget, but this without a doubt.



STUART. Charles I. 1625-1649. Gold Medal (60mm, 79.05 g, 12h). Dominion of the Seas. Original; cast and chased by Nicolas Briot in London. 1639. CAROLVS · I · D : G · MAG · BRITANN · FRAN · ET · HIB · REX · (lozenge and double lozenge stops), Bare-headed bust of Charles I to right, his hair long and with ‘lovelock’ on his left shoulder, wearing a decorated cuirass with the plain collar of his shirt falling over it, and the St. George of the Order of the Garter suspended on a ribbon from his neck; on shoulder truncation, 1639 (barely visible); behind near the edge, BRIOT / NEC · META · MIHI · QVÆ · TERMINVS · ORBI · (Nor is a limit to me that which is a boundary to the world), War ship sailing to right, under full sail and with sailors on deck and in the rigging; on the left, seashore with fortress. Cf. MI 285/97 (unlisted in gold and with date on truncation of shoulder); Eimer 136a corr. (no date on truncation of shoulder in gold); P. C. Godman, Itchingfield, Sussex Archaeological Collections Relating to the History and Antiquities of the County 41 (1898), pp. 95-158, and especially pp. 118 ff. and pl. 7 (facing p. 118, this medal); Jones 174 (in silver). EF, Beautifully toned and impressive. Some traces of suspension marks. Unique and of the greatest historical importance. This medal was the personal property of King Charles I and was given, as a keepsake, to Bishop William Juxon during the last few weeks of the King’s life. It has passed by bequest and descent until 2010.

Made for Charles I by N. Briot in 1639 and kept by the King until he gave it to Bishop Juxon in 1649; from Juxon as a gift to his niece Elizabeth Merlott c. 1649, by descent in the Merlott family to Charles Merlott Chitty in 1815, then by descent from him to William Ffarington Chitty in 1867, who, in turn, left it to Percy Sanden Godman in 1878, by descent within the Godman family until 2010, from whom it was loaned for display in the Pepys Library of Magdalene College, Cambridge (1986-2009).
No question, a Newfoundland 2 dollar gold piece from 1880.
Not a coin, but I would buy a well-preserved 1918 5000 Francs Flameng....
I will take my 100k in Kuwait Dinar ... most bang for the buck at the moment.
With this I could get me a decent Tenshō-Hishi Ōban but I would rather buy me a set of the 12 acient coins of Japan ... this would be more than one coin though :°
I'd buy this: https://www.sovr.co.uk/scotland-james-vi-1576-gold-twenty-pounds-bm01689.html

I suppose I'd be able to get a better example for 100k but they don't come up for sale often as they minted less than 200 of them.

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