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10 pfennige | |||
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Coin from 1917 | |||
General information | |||
Country | |||
Value |
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Years |
1873-1922 | ||
Measurements and composition | |||
Mass |
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Diameter |
21 mm[6] | ||
Composition |
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Appearance | |||
Shape |
round | ||
Alignment |
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Obverse | |||
Reverse |
State title, value, year[6] | ||
v · d · e |
The 10 pfennig coin was first issued by the German Empire in 1873, holding a value equal to 0.10 gold mark. In 1914, the gold mark became replaced by the Papiermark, and a similar coin of the same denomination began circulating. The Weimar Republic was established in 1918, following the defeat of the Second Reich at the end of World War I, and continued issuing the coin until 1922.[7]
History[]
The first 10 pfennig coin issued in unified Germany was introduced in 1873[7], during the reign of Kaiser William I.[8] This initial issue was composed of cupronickel, weighed 4 grams, and measured 21 millimeters in diameter. The Reichsadler of the Second Reich was featured on the obverse. Displayed on the reverse was the coin's value, accompanied by the state title of the German Empire (DEUTSCHES REICH) and the year. These coins were issued from 1873 to 1876, and then again from 1888 to 1889, produced at mints in Berlin (A), Hannover (B), Frankfurt (C), Munich (D), Dresden (E), Muldenhütten (E), Stuttgart (F), Karlsruhe (G), Darmstadt (H), and Hamburg (J).[9] At least 272,305,506 examples were minted between 1873 and 1889, with an unrecorded number being struck in proof quality.[1]
Production of the 10 pfennig coin recommenced in 1890, and between that year and 1889, no alterations were made to the coins, excluding changes to the design of the Reichsadler on the reverse. From 1873 to 1889, the heraldic eagle itself was rather small and bore a large shield on its breast. However, in 1890, the eagle on the coins became larger while the shield on its breast became smaller.[9] The second issue was minted from 1890 to 1894, and then again from 1896 to 1916, produced at each of the mints listed above excluding those in Hannover, Frankfurt, Dresden, and Darmstadt. At least 479,467,250 examples were minted, with more than 250 being struck in proof quality.[2]
In 1916, a new issue of the 10 pfennig coin made its debut. Unlike the previous issues, it was composed of zinc-plated iron and weighed 3.6 grams, but managed to retain the 21 millimeter diameter of the previous coins. It was virtually identical to the issues that came before it, excluding the beaded border surrounding the Reichsadler on the reverse. The third issue coins were produced from 1916 to 1918, and then again from 1921 to 1922, with a total mintage of at least 244,698,000, excluding proofs.[3]
Two similar zinc issues were introduced a year following the debut of the third coin issue.[7] Both coins were identical to each other, except that the Reichsadler on one issue was surrounded by a beaded border.[4] The "non-beaded" coin weighed 3.23 grams[5] while its "beaded" counterpart weighed about 3.1.[4] The latter of the two coins was only minted in 1917, as compared to the former, which was issued until 1922.[7] The "non-beaded" coin had a total mintage of 1,241,733,154, which included 154 proofs.[4]
Patterns[]
A number of pattern 10 pfennig coins were produced. Many of which were designed from 1873 to 1876, though examples were also made in 1893, 1909, 1915, 1917, 1922, 1924, and 1925. Ten pfennig pattern coins are known to have been struck in aluminum, brass, copper, cupronickel, gold, iron, nickel, and zinc.[7]
See also[]
- East German 10 pfennig coin
- German 10 pfennig coin (1949-2001)
- German 10 Rentenpfennig coin
- German 10 Reichspfennig coin
References[]
|
German gold mark | |
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Banknotes | 5 ℳ • 10 ℳ • 20 ℳ • 50 ℳ • 100 ℳ • 1000 ℳ |
Coins | 1 ₰ • 2 ₰ • 5 ₰ • 10 ₰ • 20 ₰ • 25 ₰ • 50 ₰ • ½ ℳ • 1 ℳ • 2 ℳ • 3 ℳ • 5 ℳ • 10 ℳ • 20 ℳ |
Miscellaneous | Bavarian Mint • Berlin State Mint • Coinage Act of 1873 • Darmstadt Mint • Dresden Mint • Frankfurt Mint • Hamburg Mint • Hannover Mint • Karlsruhe State Mint • Muldenhütten Mint • Reichsbank • Reichskassenschein • Stuttgart State Mint |
2 mark | Anhalt (Anhalt-Dessau) • Baden • Bavaria • Bremen • Hamburg • Hesse • Lippe • Lübeck • Mecklenburg-Schwerin • Mecklenburg-Strelitz • Oldenburg • Prussia • Reuss Elder Line (Reuss-Obergreiz) • Reuss Younger Line (Reuss-Schleiz) • Saxe-Altenburg • Saxe-Coburg-Gotha • Saxe-Meiningen • Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach • Saxony (Saxony-Albertine) • Schaumburg-Lippe • Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt • Schwarzburg-Sondershausen • Württemberg |
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3 mark | Anhalt • Baden • Bavaria • Brunswick • Hamburg • Hesse • Lippe • Lübeck • Mecklenburg-Schwerin • Mecklenburg-Strelitz • Prussia • Reuss Elder Line • Saxe-Meiningen • Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach • Saxony • Schaumburg-Lippe • Schwarzburg-Sondershausen • Württemberg |
5 mark | Anhalt • Baden • Bavaria • Bremen • Brunswick • Hamburg • Hesse • Lübeck • Mecklenburg-Schwerin • Oldenburg • Prussia • Saxe-Altenburg • Saxe-Coburg-Gotha • Saxe-Meiningen • Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach • Saxony • Schaumburg-Lippe • Waldeck-Pyrmont • Württemberg |
10 mark | Anhalt • Baden • Bavaria • Bremen • Hamburg • Hesse • Lübeck • Mecklenburg-Schwerin • Mecklenburg-Strelitz • Oldenburg • Prussia • Reuss Younger Line • Saxe-Coburg-Gotha • Saxe-Meiningen • Saxony • Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt • Württemberg |
20 mark | Anhalt • Baden • Bavaria • Bremen • Brunswick • Hamburg • Hesse • Mecklenburg-Schwerin • Mecklenburg-Strelitz • Prussia • Reuss Elder Line • Reuss Younger Line • Saxe-Altenburg • Saxe-Coburg-Gotha • Saxe-Meiningen • Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach • Saxony • Schaumburg-Lippe • Schwarzburg-Sondershausen • Waldeck-Pyrmont • Württemberg |
German Papiermark | |
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Banknotes | ℳ1 • ℳ2 • ℳ5 • ℳ10 • ℳ20 • ℳ50 • ℳ100 • ℳ500 • ℳ1000 • ℳ5000 • ℳ10,000 • ℳ20,0000 • ℳ50,000 • ℳ100,000 • ℳ200,000 • ℳ500,000 • ℳ1,000,000 • ℳ2,000,000 • ℳ5,000,000 • ℳ10,000,000 • ℳ20,000,000 • ℳ50,000,000 • ℳ100,000,000 • ℳ500,000,000 • ℳ1,000,000,000 • ℳ5,000,000,000 • ℳ10,000,000,000 • ℳ20,000,000,000 • ℳ50,000,000,000 • ℳ100,000,000,000 • ℳ200,000,000,000 • ℳ500,000,000,000 • ℳ1,000,000,000,000 • ℳ5,000,000,000,000 • ℳ10,000,000,000,000 • ℳ20,000,000,000,000 • ℳ50,000,000,000,000 • ℳ100,000,000,000,000 |
Coins | ₰1 • ₰2 • ₰5 • ₰10 • ₰50 • ℳ½ • ℳ1 • ℳ3 • ℳ200 • ℳ500 |
Miscellaneous | Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic • Reichsbank |