Difference between revisions of "Germany 1907-A 1 pfennig"
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(This page contains material from http://www.coinfactswiki.com/wiki/Germany_1907-A_1_pfennig) |
m (Text replacement - "* Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, ''Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000, 47th ed.,'' Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2019. * Jaeger, Kurt, ''Die Deutschen Münzen seit 1871,'' Basel: Münzen und Medaillen AG, 1982." to "* Jaeger, Kurt, ''Die Deutschen Münzen seit 1871,'' Basel: Münzen und Medaillen AG, 1982. * Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, ''Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000, 47th ed.,'' Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2019.") |
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| − | [[Image:Germany 1907A pfennig obv JK.jpg|300px|thumb| | + | [[Image:Germany 1907A pfennig obv JK.jpg|300px|thumb|formerly in the Wildman Collection]] |
[[Image:Germany 1907A pfennig rev JK.jpg|300px|thumb]] | [[Image:Germany 1907A pfennig rev JK.jpg|300px|thumb]] | ||
| − | This coin is an copper pfennig from a type issued 1890-1916 from the Berlin (mintmark "A"), Munich (mintmark "D"), Muldenhutten (mintmark "E"), Stuttgart (mintmark "F"), Karlsruhe (mintmark "G") and Hamburg (mintmark "J") mints. Under the German Empire of 1871-1918, the denominations of [[Prussia 1913-A 2 mark KM 532|two mark]] and up were permitted for the formerly independent principalities while the lower denominations (one pfennig thru one mark) were minted to a unified design. Wartime shortages forced the government to convert the coin to [[Germany 1917-A 1 pfennig|aluminum]] in 1917-18. | + | This coin is an copper pfennig from a type issued 1890-1916 from the Berlin (mintmark "A", shown here), Munich (mintmark "D"), Muldenhutten (mintmark "E"), Stuttgart (mintmark "F"), Karlsruhe (mintmark "G") and Hamburg (mintmark "J") mints. Under the German Empire of 1871-1918, the denominations of [[Prussia 1913-A 2 mark KM 532|two mark]] and up were permitted for the formerly independent principalities while the lower denominations (one pfennig thru one mark) were minted to a unified design. Wartime shortages forced the government to convert the coin to [[Germany 1917-A 1 pfennig|aluminum]] in 1917-18. |
''Recorded mintage:'' 33,718,000 (a very common date). | ''Recorded mintage:'' 33,718,000 (a very common date). | ||
| − | ''Specification:'' copper. | + | ''Specification:'' 2 g, copper, 17.5 mm diameter. |
''Catalog reference:'' KM 10. | ''Catalog reference:'' KM 10. | ||
''[[Bibliography|Source:]]'' | ''[[Bibliography|Source:]]'' | ||
| + | * Jaeger, Kurt, ''Die Deutschen Münzen seit 1871,'' Basel: Münzen und Medaillen AG, 1982. | ||
* Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, ''Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000, 47th ed.,'' Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2019. | * Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, ''Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000, 47th ed.,'' Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2019. | ||
* Craig, William D., ''[[Germany|Germanic]] Coinages: Charlemagne through Wilhelm II,'' Mountain View, CA: 1954. | * Craig, William D., ''[[Germany|Germanic]] Coinages: Charlemagne through Wilhelm II,'' Mountain View, CA: 1954. | ||
''Link to:'' | ''Link to:'' | ||
| − | * [[Germany | + | * [[Germany 1905-E pfennig|1905-E pfennig]] |
| + | * [[Germany 1907-F 2 pfennig|1907-F 2 pfennig]] | ||
* [[Germany 1907-A 5 pfennig|1907-A 5 pfennig]] | * [[Germany 1907-A 5 pfennig|1907-A 5 pfennig]] | ||
| + | * [[Germany 1907-D 1/2 mark|1907-D ½ mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Germany 1907-D mark|1907-D mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Germany 1907-J mark|1907-J mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Baden 1907 2 mark]], death of the grand duke | ||
| + | * [[Baden 1907-G 5 mark Dav-537|Baden 1907-G 5 mark, death of the grand duke]] | ||
| + | * [[Baden 1907-G 10 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Bavaria 1907-D 2 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Bremen 1907-J 10 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Hamburg 1907-J 5 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Lubeck 1907-A 5 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Prussia 1907-A 2 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Prussia 1907-A 5 mark Dav-789|Prussia 1907-A 5 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Saxe-Coburg-Gotha 1907-A 5 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Saxony 1907-E 2 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Saxony 1907-E 5 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Saxony 1907-E 10 mark]] | ||
| + | * [[Wurttemberg 1907-F 5 mark Dav-964|Wurttemberg 1907-F 5 mark]] | ||
* [[Germany 1908-A pfennig|1908-A pfennig]] | * [[Germany 1908-A pfennig|1908-A pfennig]] | ||
* [[Germany 1910-A 25 pfennig|1910-A 25 pfennig]] | * [[Germany 1910-A 25 pfennig|1910-A 25 pfennig]] | ||
Latest revision as of 10:00, 20 January 2026
This coin is an copper pfennig from a type issued 1890-1916 from the Berlin (mintmark "A", shown here), Munich (mintmark "D"), Muldenhutten (mintmark "E"), Stuttgart (mintmark "F"), Karlsruhe (mintmark "G") and Hamburg (mintmark "J") mints. Under the German Empire of 1871-1918, the denominations of two mark and up were permitted for the formerly independent principalities while the lower denominations (one pfennig thru one mark) were minted to a unified design. Wartime shortages forced the government to convert the coin to aluminum in 1917-18.
Recorded mintage: 33,718,000 (a very common date).
Specification: 2 g, copper, 17.5 mm diameter.
Catalog reference: KM 10.
- Jaeger, Kurt, Die Deutschen Münzen seit 1871, Basel: Münzen und Medaillen AG, 1982.
- Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1901-2000, 47th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2019.
- Craig, William D., Germanic Coinages: Charlemagne through Wilhelm II, Mountain View, CA: 1954.
Link to:
- 1905-E pfennig
- 1907-F 2 pfennig
- 1907-A 5 pfennig
- 1907-D ½ mark
- 1907-D mark
- 1907-J mark
- Baden 1907 2 mark, death of the grand duke
- Baden 1907-G 5 mark, death of the grand duke
- Baden 1907-G 10 mark
- Bavaria 1907-D 2 mark
- Bremen 1907-J 10 mark
- Hamburg 1907-J 5 mark
- Lubeck 1907-A 5 mark
- Prussia 1907-A 2 mark
- Prussia 1907-A 5 mark
- Saxe-Coburg-Gotha 1907-A 5 mark
- Saxony 1907-E 2 mark
- Saxony 1907-E 5 mark
- Saxony 1907-E 10 mark
- Wurttemberg 1907-F 5 mark
- 1908-A pfennig
- 1910-A 25 pfennig
- 1914-E pfennig
- Coins and currency dated 1907
- return to coins of Germany, Empire (1871-1918)