Thursday 16 January 2014

The Value Of The Year Of The Dragon Silver Coin

By Marissa Velazquez


The most recent Chinese Year of the Dragon occurred between January 23, 2012 and February 9, 2013. In commemoration of this event, many Year of the Dragon silver coins were produced. Apparently, there is something special about dragon babies. They are said to be quite lucky and to have many remarkable qualities. In fact, the birth rate in countries that use the Chinese zodiac during this particular year.

As well as cycling through the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac, the calendar has a cycle of four elements: air, fire, earth and water. 2012 was a water year. Some experts believe that the dragon is actually a scorpion and that it symbolized the red supergiant star, Antares.

The Chinese calendar is embraced in countries in Southeast Asia such as Vietnam, Taiwan, Japan, Korea and China. While the western zodiac uses constellations, the Chinese calendar is based on animals. Also, while the Chinese animals cycle once every dozen years, the western constituents cycle every one dozen months.

There are positive, negative and health traits for each sign of the Chinese zodiac. On the positive side, they are generous, noble, vigorous, gallant, passionate, dignified and confident. On the down side, they may also be demanding, tactless, arrogant, dogmatic, authoritarian and hotheaded. Potential health risks include diabetes, migraines and high blood pressure. Famous dragons include Julius Caesar, John Lennon, Bruce Lee and Joan of Arc.

Year of the dragon silver coins can be an excellent investment. An 1890s antique coin, originally valued at 20 cents, is worth close to 300 times that today. As well as countries like China and Japan, where the Chinese zodiac is embraced, these coins are minted in western countries such as Australia, Canada and France, among others.

Of course, other signs of the Chinese zodiac are represented as well. France has acquired the habit of minting Chinese zodiac coins in the amount of five Euros. In 2012, it was the dragon, in 2011, the rabbit and in 2010 it was the tiger.

As with any investment, you need to do some research and make sure you can distinguish between a counterfeit and the real thing. For example, a number of counterfeit Australian dragon coins from 2012 appeared on the market. Fortunately, there are a number of ways that the careful buyer can scrutinize these items before proceeding with the purchase.

On the Queen side of the year of the dragon silver coin, the counterfeit version shows her smiling, with a sharper nose and without wrinkles on her forehead. The genuine article gives her wrinkles, less of a smile and a less pointy nose. The other side of the fake coinage has smooth claws instead of scaley, less prominent swirls on the clouds and thinner text than the real deal.




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