Mark is the Rohan metal game silver coin for games in fantasty worlds.
Rohan coins were originally derived from Gondor coins. That’s why they are the same size. Like Gondor’s, they were widespread throughout much of Middle-earth, and were particularly fond of being used by hobbits in the Shire, in addition to Rohan.
The Rohirs used a language called Rohiri. The Rohir language was inspired by Old English. As for writing, the Rohir used a script called Cirth (also known as runes) just like the Hobbits.
The inscriptions on the coin mean:
Lōgrad freolond éorin – Rohan the land of the free
beormas Eorlarfrea – Boundless Free Plains.
Diameter 26 mm
Material: Metal (zinc) alloy
This is a coin for all kinds of games set in fantasy worlds.
If you would like a different color of this coin, it can be done on an order from 500 pieces.
This coin is a replica of a real historical coin that was minted in Roma.
The coins are intended for board games, larp or other uses where you want credible coins at a good price.
The sestertius first appears around 211 BC as a small silver coin worth one quarter of a denarius. In about 23 BC Augustus changed the currency and the sestertius was a bronze coin from then on. As one of the most common currencies, the sestertius was used until the end of the third century. Most of them were struck at the mint in Rome.
The sestertius was adopted as the basic monetary unit, the values of everything were mostly converted to sestertius. For example, the property of the exceptionally rich politician and warlord Crassus was estimated at 200 million sesterces. The price of a slave was about 6000 sesterces. The standard salary of a legionnaire in the first century was 900 sesterces per year, which, after deducting the cost of food and equipment, meant that a legionnaire lived on about 1.5 sesterces per day, which would be the equivalent of around $30-$40 in today’s currency.