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Pages in category "Coins of Russia" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Altyn; C. Constantine ...
1993 - ballerina; 1994 - ballerina; 3 rubles - silver - Monastery of Raifa - 2005; 3 rubles - silver - Kazan train station - 2007 3 rubles - silver - Moscow subway station - 2005 3 rubles - silver - Russakov House of Culture - 2005
Since the monetary reform of 1534, one Russian accounting ruble became equivalent to 100 silver Novgorod denga coins or smaller 200 Muscovite denga coins or even smaller 400 polushka coins. Exactly the former coin with a rider on it soon became colloquially known as kopek and was the higher coin until the beginning of the 18th century.
Money of Russia - photos of Soviet commemorative gold, platinum and palladium coins; USSR Silver Coins – with photos and descriptions; The Mint – detailed descriptions and photos of 1965–1996 Soviet and Russian commemorative copper-nickel coins
List of commemorative coins of Russia (2009) S. List of commemorative coins of the Soviet Union
For example, the Moscow Mint produced the coins for Abkhazia, the Abkhazian apsar and many of the coins of India. The mint fills individual orders for the manufacture of badges, medals and tokens. The history of coinage in Moscow dates back several centuries, but the date of the founding of the modern enterprise is considered to be 25 April 1942.
The Russian George the Victorious (Russian: монета Георгий Победоносец) is a bullion coin issued in gold and silver by the Central Bank of Russia. Mintage began in 2006 with quarter-troy ounce (7.78g) gold coins with a face value of 50 rubles and later in 2009 a one-troy ounce silver coin was introduced with a face value ...
Coins: The first coinage after the Russian Civil War was minted in 1921–1923 according to pre-war Czarist standards, with silver coins of 10, 15 and 20 kopecks minted in 50% silver, 50 kopecks ("poltinnik" or 1 ⁄ 2 ruble) and 1 ruble in 90% silver, and 10 rubles (one chervonets) in 90% gold.