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The South African Five Cents coin (abbreviated as 5c) was a small circulating coin of the Rand currency. It was introduced when the currency was decimalised in 1961 and replaced the earlier pre-decimal sixpence. The first version was made of silver and was only issued for four years. In 1965, the Second Decimal Coinage was introduced, in which the Five Cents denomination was made of nickel. This was changed to a larger copper-plated steel version in 1990, issued until 2011 after which time the denomination was discontinued. Apart from the regular designs, there were also four commemorative issues with different obverses. 5c coins issued in 1967 circulated for 23 years until they were replaced with the steel version. | ||||||
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The Definitive Guide to Australian Silver Coins |
Country | South Africa |
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Currency | Rand |
Coin Type | Five Cents, Nickel |
Issued | 1967 |
Symbol | Jan van Riebeeck (right) |
Face Value | 5 (x Cent) |
Circulation Mintage | 4,590,000 (4.6 million) |
Total Mintage | 4,590,000 (4.6 million) |
Current | No; withdrawn 1990 |
Material | Nickel |
Designer | Tommy Sasseen |
Technology | Milled (machine-made) |
Shape | Round |
Orientation | Medal Alignment (Axis 0) |
Size | 17.3500 mm |
Thickness | 1.6000 mm |
Mass | 2.5000 g |
OCC ID | APVZ-EYRC-XLNJ-OLMD |
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Catalog of Modern World Coins 1850-1964 |
Source | Reference ID |
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Krause, Standard Catalog of World Coins | South Africa KM# 67.1 |
Hern's Handbook on South African Coins and Patterns | Hern# D85 |
Schön, Weltmünzkatalog | Schön# 88 |