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Coin: Difference between revisions

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[[File:ACReb-coins.png|thumb|125px|Pile of coins]]
[[File:ACReb-coins.png|thumb|125px|Pile of coins]]
A '''coin''' is a flat, round piece of metal used to as a medium of exchange. For thousands of years, [[human]] societies across the [[Earth|world]] have minted coins to act as the physical form of money, and they have been vital to the emergence of state [[economy|economies]].
A '''coin''' is a flat, round piece of metal used to as a medium of exchange. For thousands of years, [[human]] societies across the [[Earth|world]] have minted coins to act as the physical form of money, and they have been vital to the emergence of state [[economy|economies]].

Revision as of 00:33, 15 October 2021

Pile of coins

A coin is a flat, round piece of metal used to as a medium of exchange. For thousands of years, human societies across the world have minted coins to act as the physical form of money, and they have been vital to the emergence of state economies.

Usage

The Animus, enabling people to revisit times past in virtual reality simulations, simulated the historical currencies of any time period or country that used coins.[1]

These included the drachmae in ancient Greece[2] and Egypt;[3] silver and gold in Anglo-Saxon England;[4] florins,[1][5] ducats,[6][7] reales,[8][9] and escudos[10] throughout Europe from the 13th to 20th century; akçe in Ottoman Constantinople;[11] doubloons in the West Indies during the Golden Age of Piracy;[8][12][13] livres in Revolutionary France;[14]; the pound sterling throughout the United Kingdom[15] and its colonies in North America[16][17] and India;[18]as well as écu in French Colonial Louisiana.[19]

In addition, sometimes special coins were used, such as Assassins' coins collected by the Louisianan Assassin Aveline de Grandpré,[19] and the Templar coins collected by the Levantine Assassin Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad.[20]

Appearances

References