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Horses on coins

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50 State Quarters
series of US coins
Sacagawea dollar
US 1 dollar coin minted since 2000
America the Beautiful Quarters
series of U.S. coins
Quincunx
bronze coin minted during the Roman Republic
Biatec
thumb|right|An original Biatec and its replica on a modern 5-Slovak koruna|koruna coin, which was in use until Slovakia joined the euro zone on January 1, 2009 right|thumb|Biatec sculpture in Bratislava at National Bank of Slovakia Biatec was the name of a person, presumably a king, who appeared on the Celtic coins minted by the Boii in Bratislava (the capital of Slovakia) in the 1st century BC. The word Biatec (or Biatex) is also used as the name of those coins. In the literature, they are also sometimes referred to as "hexadrachms of the Bratislava type". Biatecs, in fact hexadrachms and tet
crown
British coin introduced in 1707
ducaton
The ducaton, ducatone or ducatoon was a crown-sized silver coin of the 16th-18th centuries.
bigatus
thumb|Victoria (goddess)|Victory in a biga on the reverse of a denarius (bigatus), with the head of Mars thumb|Serratus depicting Diana (mythology)|Diana, with Victory driving a biga
Lafayette dollar
silver coin issued as part of the United States' participation in the Paris World's Fair of 1900
Egyptian gold stater
first coin minted in ancient Egypt
Philippeioi
Philippeioi (, Philíppeioi), later called Alexanders (Ἀλέξανδροι, Aléxandroi), were the gold coins used in the ancient Greek Kingdom of Macedonia. First issued at some point between 355 and 347 BC, the coins featured a portrait of the Greek deity Apollo on the obverse, and on the reverse, an illustration of a biga, a Greek chariot drawn by two horses. They had the value of one gold stater each. In the first issuing, Apollo was depicted with long hair, but after that the design was altered permanently to one in which Apollo's hair was shorter.
Half sovereign
English and British gold coin
Cavallo
Italian Renaissance coin
Stone Mountain Memorial half dollar
American fifty-cent piece
Gnaeus Lucretius Trio
Roman moneyer in 136 BC