Why People Keep Asking About Old Coins
Estimated reading time. About 12 to 15 minutes. Almost everyone who encounters an old coin asks the same question. Why does…
Estimated reading time. About 12 to 15 minutes. Almost everyone who encounters an old coin asks the same question. Why does…
Estimated reading time. About 14 to 17 minutes. Who was on the 1793 penny. The question sounds simple, but the answer…
Estimated reading time. About 15 to 18 minutes. When we imagine the Middle Ages, we often picture heavy purses filled with…
Estimated reading time. About 16 to 18 minutes. Most people today think of gold as the natural foundation of ancient wealth….
Estimated reading time. About 16 to 19 minutes. Most people assume money created value. History suggests something more subtle. Long before…
Estimated reading time: 18 minutes. Imagine walking into a busy market with no coins, no bills, and no prices written on…
Estimated reading time: 13–16 minutes When people imagine medieval money, they often picture neat silver coins stacked in tidy piles. That…
Estimated reading time: 13–15 minutes When people imagine medieval money, they usually picture silver coins clinking in leather pouches. The reality…
Estimated reading time: 11–13 minutes Money in the Middle Ages did not behave the way modern money does. It was not…
Estimated reading time: 10–12 minutes At some point, many American coins stopped feeling old. Not suddenly. Not officially. But gradually, almost…
Estimated reading time: 10–12 minutes Most people assume coin design changes slowly, almost invisibly. A small adjustment here, a minor update…
Estimated reading time: 10–12 minutes Some American coins feel different the moment you touch them. Not in a dramatic way, not…