Swedish Coins: Type CollectingCopyright © 2007-2009 Ken Polssoninternet e-mail: contact@cointypes.info All rights reserved. Permission is granted to create web links to this site, not to copy these pages to other web sites. URL: http://cointypes.info/sweden/ |
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These pages show the different types of circulating coins produced in Sweden. My target audience is not so much the serious numismatist, but more the novice and casual collector.
Coins can be collected in various manners: coins for circulation versus coins for collectors, individual coins versus sets or rolls, circulated coins versus mint state, every date and mint mark versus major types. This Web site presents information to help with assembling a "type" collection of individual circulated Swedish coins. What is "type" collecting? Type collecting is assembling coins of different designs. A type set generally excludes minor variations that include the same basic design. Examples are date change, and mint marks. Major variations in coin composition (such as a switch from iron to bronze) constitute a type change, but a minor variation (such as copper-tin-zinc to copper-zinc) do not represent a type change. Different collectors will have their own opinions of what coins should be included in a type collection. The following is my interpretation of significant year-to-year changes in Swedish circulating coins. At present, the coins shown start with the reign of King Gustaf IV Adolf, 1792-1809. As time permits, I will move the start year back further into the 1700s and 1600s. See also: Swedish Coins: Type Collecting Check List. The monetary system of Sweden (starting with the 1700s) proceeded as follows:
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