By CoinLink on Monday, August 20, 2007Filed Under: Banknotes, Books
The new third edition of Doug Murray’s large-size star note reference debuted at the Memphis paper money show. About 95 million large-size star notes were printed. Only .007 percent of that total are known today. Murray has recorded 6,296 large-size star note serial numbers, all listed with the date that they were made known to the author. All 29 different types of star notes are illustrated, listed by class and then by denomination. Friedberg reference numbers accompany the listings, and Murray has also devised a numbering system specifically for this book.

By CoinLink on Monday, August 20, 2007Filed Under: General Collecting, World Coins
A class of coins known as pieforts offers a different kind of collecting option for the world coin collector. These coins carry designs found on their lighter, thinner counterparts, but in thick versions. Pieforts, simply, are twice the coin. They have a long and dual history, and remain popular today. What are they? A piefort (French spelling: piedfort) is a coin that is struck “with ordinary dies on an unusually thick planchet. It is not intended for circulation and is therefore distinct from the dump, a thick coin struck for commercial use,” according to The Macmillan Encyclopedic Dictionary of Numismatics by Richard Doty.

By CoinLink on Monday, August 20, 2007Filed Under: Auction News, World Coins
Included in the Collection of Russian Imperial Gold Medals consigned to Spink’s 27 September auction is one of the most spectacular gold medals of the entire series, the rectangular gold medal commemorating the opening of the Moscow Triumphal Arch in St. Petersburg.The Moscow Triumphal Arch was erected to commemorate the Russian military victories won during the wars with Persia, Turkey and Poland, 1826-1828. The massive cast iron gateway, situated on the Moscow Highway (today called Avenue Moscow) was designed by the Russian classical architect Vasily Petrovich Stasov (1769-1848).
