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1 Cent Canadienne 1859 serait recherché?

Question de zipoo le 06/06/2010 à 04h39
Dernière réponse le 23/08/2012 à 10h28
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J'ai une pièce de monnaie Canadienne de 1859 quelqu'un pourrais-t'il me donner la valeur approximative? Merci beaucoup, Pat
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3 réponses pour « 
1 Cent Canadienne 1859 serait recherché?
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Réponse de Lightw4re
Le 29/09/2010 é 20h03
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Il y a beaucoup de variétés pour cette pièce. Elle peut avoir un bon nombre de valeurs différentes. Plus d'information sur la pièce de 1 cent 1859 canadienne http://www.numicanada.com/pieces-de-monnaie-valeur.php?piece=1-cent-1859&annees=1-cent-1858-1859
Référence(s) :
http://www.numicanada.com/pieces-de-monnaie-valeur.php?piece=1-cent-1859&annees=1-cent-1858-1859
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Réponse anonyme
Le 07/01/2012 é 22h39
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{{Infobox Coin | Country = Canada | Denomination = Penny | Value = 0.01 | Unit = [[Canadian dollar|CAD]] | Mass = 2.35 | Diameter = 19.05 | Thickness = 1.45 | Edge = smooth | Composition = 94% [[steel]],<br>1.5% [[nickel|Ni]],<br>4.5% [[copper|Cu]] plating | Years of Minting = 1858–present | Catalog Number = CC 20 | Obverse = Canadian Penny - Obverse.png| Obverse Design = [[Elizabeth II]], [[Title and style of the Canadian monarch|Queen of Canada]] | Obverse Designer = [[Susanna Blunt]] | Obverse Design Date = 2003 | Reverse = Canadian Penny - Reverse.png| Reverse Design = [[Maple leaf]] branch | Reverse Designer = [[George Kruger Gray|G.E. Kruger Gray]] | Reverse Design Date = 1937 | }} In [[Canada]], a '''penny''' is a [[coin]] worth one [[cent (currency)|cent]] or {{Fraction|1|100}} of a [[Canadian dollar|dollar]]. According to the [[Royal Canadian Mint]], the official national term of the coin is the "one-cent piece", but in practice the term ''penny'' or ''cent'' is universal. Originally, "penny" referred to a two-cent coin. When the two-cent coin was discontinued, ''penny'' took over as the new one-cent coin's name. ''Penny'' was likely readily adopted because the previous coinage in Canada (up to 1858) was the British monetary system, where Canada used British [[Pound sterling|pounds, shillings, and pence]] as coinage alongside U.S. decimal coins and Spanish milled dollars. In [[Canadian French]], the penny is called a ''cent'', which is spelled the same way as the French word for "hundred." Slang terms include ''cenne'', ''cenne noire'' or ''sou noir'' (black penny) although common [[Quebec French]] usage is ''sou''. ==Description== Like all Canadian coins, the [[obverse]] depicts the reigning [[Monarchy of Canada|Canadian monarch]] at the time of issue. The current obverse depicts Queen [[Elizabeth II]]; her likeness has seen three design updates in the last century, the first occurring in 1965, a 1990 update to the design of Dora de Pedery-Hunt, and the 2003 update designed by Susanna Blunt.<ref>http://www.mint.ca/store/mint/learn/faces-of-the-monarch-1100026?cat=Faces+of+the+Monarch&nId=1100026&nodeGroup=Learn</ref> A special reverse side, depicting a [[rock dove]], was issued in 1967 as part of a Centennial commemoration.<ref>The Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, W.K. Cross, p. 72, The Charlton Press, Toronto, Ontario, ISBN 0-88968-297-6</ref> It was designed by the Canadian artist [[Alex Colville]]. The current coin has a round, smooth edge, and this has been the case for most of its history; however, from 1982 to 1996, the coin was [[dodecagon|twelve-sided]]. This was done to help the visually impaired identify the coin.<ref name="cc_1">''Coins of Canada'', J.A. Haxby & R.C. Willey, Unitrade Press (2002), ISBN 1-894763-09-2</ref> ==Abolition== {{seealso|Efforts to eliminate the penny in the United States}} There have been repeated talks about getting rid of the penny as it is estimated that it costs the Royal Canadian Mint 1.8¢ to produce a 1¢ coin,<ref>[http://economics.ca/cgi/jab?journal=cpp&view=v29n4/CPPv29n4p511.pdf Fisher&Chande<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> even though the Royal Canadian Mint claims it costs only 0.8¢ to produce a penny. <ref name="yahoo.ca">[http://web.archive.org/web/20070227065549/http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/afp/070215/canada/canada_economy_money Financial group lobbies for 'penny-less' Canadian economy – Yahoo! Canada News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The Canadian penny costs at least $130 million annually to keep in circulation, estimates a financial institution (the [[Desjardins Group]]) that called for an end to the penny.<ref name="yahoo.ca"/> The Mint refuses to release the cost, citing competition, despite having a monopoly.<ref>Branswell, Jack, & Meaney, Ken. "Copper coin costs a pretty penny", ''Saskatoon Star-Phoenix'', 6 October 2008, p.A1-A2.</ref> According to a 2007 survey, only 37 percent of Canadians use pennies, but the government continues to produce about 816 million pennies per year, equal to 25 pennies per Canadian.<ref name="yahoo.ca"/> On March 31, 2008, [[New Democratic Party|NDP]] MP [[Pat Martin]] introduced a [[private member's bill]] that would eliminate the penny from circulation.<ref name=pennyeliminate>[http://www.cbc.ca/consumer/story/2008/03/31/penny.html MP to introduce bill to eliminate the penny] from [[CBC News]]</ref> The [[Swedish rounding]] system is the suggested replacement for cash transactions.<ref name="roundingbk">[http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/economy/penny.html Save the penny or leave the penny?] from [[CBC News]]</ref> In mid-2010 the Standing Senate Committee on National Finance began a study on the future of the one-cent coin.<ref>[http://parl.gc.ca/common/Committee_SenProceed.asp?Language=E&Parl=40&Ses=3&comm_id=13]</ref> On December 14, 2010, The Senate finance committee recommended<ref>http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-11996970</ref> the penny be removed from circulation, arguing that a century of inflation has eroded the value and usefulness of the one-cent piece. Presently it costs more to produce each penny (1.5¢) than it is worth monetarily. The Royal Canadian Mint has been forced to produce more such coins because pennies disappear from circulation as Canadians hoard these coins, or just cannot be bothered to use them. ==History== The first Canadian cents were struck in 1858 and had a diameter of 25.4 mm (1 inch) and a weight of 4.54 grams (1/100 of a [[Pound (mass)#Avoirdupois pound|pound]]). These cents were originally issued to bring some kind of order to the Canadian monetary system, which, until 1858, relied on British coinage, bank and commercial tokens ([[francophone]]s calling them ''sous'', a slang term that survives), U.S. currency and [[Spanish milled dollar]]s. The coin's specifications were chosen with the intention of the coins also being useful as measuring tools. However, their light weight compared to the bank and merchant halfpenny tokens readily available at the time was a serious hindrance to their acceptance by the public. Some of the coins were even sold at a 20% discount, and were inherited by the Dominion government in 1867. Fresh production of new cents (with the weight increased to 5.67 grams) was not required until 1876.<ref>The Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, W.K. Cross, p. 57, The Charlton Press, Toronto, Ontario, ISBN 0-88968-297-6</ref> The large cents of 1858-1920 were significantly larger than modern one cent coins, and have a diameter that is a little larger than the modern 25¢ piece (its diameter being 23.58 mm). After [[Confederation of Canada|Confederation]], these coins were struck on the planchet of the [[Halfpenny (British pre-decimal coin)|British halfpenny]] and were roughly the same value. Pennies were issued only sporadically in the third quarter of the 19th century. They were used in the [[Province of Canada]], [[New Brunswick]], and [[Nova Scotia]] upon Confederation in 1867. New Brunswick and Nova Scotia had issued their own coinage prior to that date, with British Columbia, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland continuing to issue "pennies" until they joined Confederation. The high price of copper forced a reduction to the current size in 1920. <!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:CanadianLargeCent.jpg|right|thumb|A large penny from 1859.]] --> ===Composition throughout history=== {|class="wikitable" ! Years !! Mass !! Diameter/Shape !! Composition<ref>[http://www.mint.ca Royal Canadian Mint – Monnaie Royale Canadienne]</ref> |- | 2000–present *</td> | 2.35 g | 19.05 mm, round | 94% [[steel]], 1.5% [[nickel]], 4.5% copper plated zinc |- | 1997–1999 * | 2.25 g | 19.05 mm, round | 98.4% [[zinc]], 1.6% copper plating |- | 1982–1996 | 2.5 g | 19.1 mm, [[Dodecagon|12-sided]] | 98% [[copper]], 1.75% [[tin]], 0.25% zinc |- | 1980–1981 | 2.8 g | 19.0 mm, round | 98% copper, 1.75% tin, 0.25% zinc |- | 1978–1979 | 3.24 g | 19.05 mm, round | 98% copper, 1.75% tin, 0.25% zinc |- | 1942–1977 | 3.24 g | 19.05 mm, round | 98% copper, 0.5% tin, 1.5% zinc |- | 1920–1941 | 3.24 g | 19.05 mm, round | 95.5% copper, 3% tin, 1.5% zinc |- | 1876–1920 | 5.67 g | 25.4 mm, round | 95.5% copper, 3% tin, 1.5% zinc |- | 1858–1859 | 4.54 g | 25.4 mm, round | 95% copper, 4% tin, 1% zinc |} * Although the RCM states 2000 as the year of transition from zinc to steel, zinc-core cents were issued in every year of the 2000's, except 2008. Steel cents dated before 2002 are test pieces for calibrating coin-operated machines, and are very rare in circulation. From May 2006 to October 2008, all circulation Canadian pennies from 1942 to 1996 had an intrinsic value of over $0.02 CAD based on the increasing spot price of copper in the commodity markets. The break-even price for a 2.8 g solid copper penny is $1.61 [[USD]]/[[Pound (mass)|lb]], with prices during this period reaching as high as $4 USD/lb.<ref>[http://www.kitcometals.com/charts/copper_historical_large.html Kitco – Spot Copper Historical Charts and Graphs – Copper charts – Industrial metals]</ref> == Commemorative editions == {|class="wikitable" !Year !Theme !Artist !Mintage !Special notes |- |1967 |Canadian Centennial |Alex Colville |345,140,645 |Features a [[rock dove]] in flight. |- |} ==First strikes== {|class="wikitable" !Year !Theme !Mintage !Issue price |- |2005 |First day cover |1,799 |$14.95 |- |2006 |With new mint mark |5,000 |$29.95 |- |} ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== {{Commons}} *[http://www.coinsandcanada.com/coins-prices.php Value of Canadian Pennies] * [http://www.coinscan.com/des/1967d.html Coinage Designs of 1967] {{Canadian_currency_and_coinage}} [[Category:Coins of Canada]] [[Category:One cent coins]] [[fr:Cent (pièce canadienne)]]
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Réponse anonyme
Le 23/08/2012 é 10h28
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Pourriez vous me dire le prix d'une piéce de1859 d'origine canadienne sous le régne victoria merci a l'avance
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1 Cent Canadienne 1859 serait recherché?
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