States are setting new rules for cash purchases after the U.S. Mint stopped making pennies and the 1-cent coins get scarcer.
A public transit official working for the city of Leeds found the coin while counting bus and tram fares. Now, his grandson has donated it to Leeds Museums and Galleries ...
Scoop Empire on MSN
Sheikha Bodour’s latest initiative spotlights the legacy of rare Islamic coins in Milan
Her Highness Sheikha Bodour bint Sultan Al Qasimi, Chairperson of the Sharjah Book Authority (SBA), has launched an exciting scientific initiative to document one of the world’s rarest collections of ...
Her Highness Sheikha Bodour bint Sultan Al Qasimi, Chairperson of the Sharjah Book Authority (SBA) has launched a scientific initiative to document a rare collection of Islamic coins preserved at ...
H.H. Sheikha Bodour bint Sultan Al Qasimi, Chairperson of the Sharjah Book Authority (SBA), has launched a scientific initiative to document a rare ...
At Home Hustle on MSN
7 everyday items that could become future collectibles
Most of the things sitting on your shelf right now seem utterly ordinary. A sneaker box. A trading card still in its wrapper.
Capri Sun cocktails, cheese coins, and sticky pudding. Cookbook clubs bring CT's home cooks together
Libraries are turning book club meetings into potlucks by choosing a different cookbook over traditional books.
Chandigarh, Feb 3 (PTI) Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann on Tuesday unveiled in Mumbai a book about the Kuninda tribe's coinage and said it highlights the cultural heritage of Punjab, helping ...
The decision by the Trump administration to stop minting pennies that cost more than 2½ times their face value to make might be one of the most logical of the first year of the president’s second term ...
The U.S. Treasury Department has stopped producing the penny after more than 230 years. It now costs 3.69 cents to produce a single penny, which is significantly more than its face value. Pennies will ...
Not many people today can say they have touched a Roman coin from around 100 CE. Reza Ramji ’28, a student from the Classics Department and a coin cataloguer at Princeton University’s Numismatic ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results