two piece crown - traduction vers arabe
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two piece crown - traduction vers arabe

COIN OF THE UNITED STATES
United States Two Cent Coin; United States two cent coin; Two-cent piece (U.S. coin); US two cent piece; United States two cent peice; Two cent piece (United States coin); United States two-cent piece; US two-cent piece; Two-cent piece (United States coin); Two-cent coin (United States); Two-cent piece (Untied States)
  • 1836 pattern for the two-cent piece
  • Cent-sized [[Civil War token]], issued privately as all federal coinage was hoarded
  • The new [[Shield nickel]] (first coined 1866) both resembled the two-cent piece and helped drive it from circulation.

two piece crown      
‎ تاجٌ ذُو قِطْعَتَين‎
two piece         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Two Pieces; Two-piece (disambiguation); Two piece
ثوب ذو قطعتين, مجزأ إلى إثنان
crown prince         
  • Japanese Imperial Throne]] – ''New York Times,'' 1916.
HEIR TO THE THRONE
Crown princess; Crown Princess; Prince de Venise; Prinz von Preussen; Naba Yuvaraj; Yuvarajadhiraj; Nava Yuvaraj; Walet; Crown-prince; Crown princess of Sweden; Arvfurstinna; Arvfurste; Kronprinz; Crown Prince; Hereditary prince; Hereditary princess; Hereditary Prince; Hereditary Princess
وليّ العهد

Définition

two piece

Wikipédia

Two-cent piece (United States)

The two-cent piece was produced by the Mint of the United States for circulation from 1864 to 1872 and for collectors in 1873. Designed by James B. Longacre, there were decreasing mintages each year, as other minor coins such as the nickel proved more popular. It was abolished by the Mint Act of 1873.

The economic turmoil of the American Civil War caused government-issued coins, even the non-silver Indian Head cent, to vanish from circulation, hoarded by the public. One means of filling this gap was private token issues, often made of bronze. The cent at that time was struck of a copper-nickel alloy, the same diameter as the later Lincoln cent, but somewhat thicker. The piece was difficult for the Philadelphia Mint to strike, and Mint officials, as well as the annual Assay Commission, recommended the coin's replacement. Despite opposition from those wishing to keep the metal nickel in the coinage, led by Pennsylvania Congressman Thaddeus Stevens, Congress passed the Coinage Act of 1864, authorizing bronze cents and two-cent pieces.

Although initially popular in the absence of other federal coinage, the two-cent piece's place in circulation was usurped by other base-metal coins which Congress subsequently authorized, the three-cent piece and the nickel. It was abolished in 1873; large quantities were redeemed by the government and melted. Nevertheless, two-cent pieces remain relatively inexpensive by the standards of 19th-century American coinage.