Estimate: 2.000.000 CHFTHE FIRST 100 ESCUDOS EVER STRUCK.
Spain.
Philip III,
100 Escudos 1609,
Segovia.
Unique.
314
Estimate: 100.000 CHFTHE FINEST PORTRAIT OF CLEOPATRA.
Roman Republic.
Cleopatra VII and Mark Antony,
Tetradrachm 36 BC,
Antioch on the Orontes.
152
Estimate: 300.000 CHFRoman Empire.
Augustus,
Aureus circa 27 BC-15 CE,
Pergamon (?).
153
Estimate: 500.000 CHFMexico.
Philip V,
8 Escudos 1729/7,
Mexico.
NGC MS65 (Top pop).
300
Estimate: 500.000 CHFTHE FIRST GOLD SOVEREIGN IN HISTORY.
Great Britain.
Henry VII,
Gold Sovereign,
type I, Cross Fitchee, n. d. (1492),
Tower mint.
231
Estimate: 100.000 CHFIslamic World.
Temp. 'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan,
Solidus
AH 72-74.
184
Estimate: 70.000 CHFItaly, Ferrara.
Alfonso I d'Este,
2 Ducats n. d.,
Ferrara.
289
Estimate: 200.000 CHFTauric Chersonese.
Pantikapaion,
Gold Stater
circa 380-370 BC.
72
Estimate: 3.000 CHFSarawak.
Charles Anthony Johnson Brooke,
50 Cents 1906,
Birmingham (Heaton).
NGC SP66 (Highest grade).
1166
Estimate: 1.000 CHFUSA.
50 Cents 1795,
Philadelphia.
1420
Archive: People and Markets

These Are Japan’s New Banknotes

As announced in 2019, Japan will have new banknotes of 1,000, 5,000, and 10,000 yen denominations. They are planned to enter circulation in 2024. In April 2023, the Bank of Japan presented the first specimens of the new banknotes and revealed the various new motifs.

Those are the people honored by being portrayed on the new Japanese banknotes.

Those are the people honored by being portrayed on the new Japanese banknotes.

The ¥1000 bill will feature physician and bacteriologist Kitasato Shibasaburō (1853–1931). On the the ¥5000 bill, Tsuda Umeko, educator and founder of Tsuda University, will appear. She is the fourth female to appear on a Japanese banknote, after Empress Jingū, Murasaki Shikibu and Higuchi Ichiyō. The ¥10,000 banknote will honour the industrialist Shibusawa Eiichi (1840-1931).

Specimen of the ¥1,000 bill. Source: 独立行政法人 国立印刷局 via Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 4.0

Specimen of the ¥1,000 bill. Source: 独立行政法人 国立印刷局 via Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 4.0

Specimen of the ¥5,000 bill. Source: 独立行政法人 国立印刷局 via Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 4.0

Specimen of the ¥5,000 bill. Source: 独立行政法人 国立印刷局 via Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 4.0

Specimen of the ¥10,000 bill. Source: 独立行政法人 国立印刷局 via Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 4.0

Specimen of the ¥10,000 bill. Source: 独立行政法人 国立印刷局 via Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 4.0

The reverse sides will show Tokyo Station (¥10,000) and wisteria flowers (¥5000). Outside of Japan, probably best known will be the reverse image of the 1,000 yen note featuring arguably one of the most famous Japanese work of art: “The Great Wave off Kanagawa” by Hokusai.

The Bank of Japan has placed special emphasis on the implementation of the latest anti-counterfeiting technologies. These technologies include high-definition watermarks, 3-D portrait holograms, microprinting, luminescent ink, and tactile marks. To make the denominations more easily recognizable for foreigners, the Arabic numbers on the new banknotes will be much bigger compared to the old bills.

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