dcordeiro 的钱币相册
04. Bremen The Free Hanseatic City of Bremen, long a rival to Hamburg, struck few coins under the Empire (1871-1918). These are limited to this two mark, a five mark of 1906, a twenty mark of 1906 and a ten mark of 1907. Recorded mintage: 100,000 plus 200 proofs. Specification: 11.11 g, .900 fine silver, 28 mm diameter. Catalog reference: KM-250; J-59.
06. Hesse-Darmstadt (Grand Duchy) Jubilee coin dedicated to 400th Birthday of Philip the Magnanimous. Obverse: Portraits of the Landgraf Philip the Magnanimous (1509 – 1567) and Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig (1892 – 1918) left. Semicircular inscription: PHILIPP · LANDGRAF · Z · HESSEN · ERNST · LUDWIG · GROSSHERZOG · V · HESSEN · U · B · R. Beneath it – the date in two lines: 13 · NOV · 1504 · 1904. On the both sides of portraits – Latin semicircular inscription: VERBUM DNI MANET / IN AETERNUM (THE WORD OF GOD ENDURETH FOR EVER). Beneath it – mint mark 'A' (Berlin). Reverse: The arms of the country with a so-called big eagle, above it – the German imperial crown; on a breast of an eagle – board with the arms of Prussia, around it – a Prussian award of the Black Eagle with a circuit. Semicircular inscription: DEUTSCHES REICH 1904 · ZWEI MARK. 900 standard silver (Ag 900, Cu 100). Diameter – 28 mm. Weight – 11.111 g. Edge – 140 corrugations, thickness 2.1 mm. Mintage: 100 000.
07. Lippe-Detmold (Principality) The small principality of Lippe-Detmold issued only two coin types during the Second Empire, this and a three mark dated 1913, both scarce. Recorded mintage: 20,000 plus 1,000 proofs Specification: 11.11 g, .900 fine silver, .321 troy oz ASW, 28 mm diameter Catalog reference: KM 270