Difference between revisions of "Germany 2007-D cent"
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* [[Germany 2002-A 50 cent|2002-A 50 cent]] | * [[Germany 2002-A 50 cent|2002-A 50 cent]] | ||
* [[Germany 2007-A 100 euro|2007-A 100 euro, Lubeck]] | * [[Germany 2007-A 100 euro|2007-A 100 euro, Lubeck]] | ||
| + | * [[Portugal 2009 cent]] | ||
* [[France 2010 cent]] | * [[France 2010 cent]] | ||
* [[Germany 2011-D 2 euro|2011-D 2 euro]] | * [[Germany 2011-D 2 euro|2011-D 2 euro]] | ||
Revision as of 16:28, 4 March 2023
The specimen shown is an example of a type struck in Munich for Germany. Germany began minting euros in 2002. The oak leaf, a symbol of strength first used on coins of the Weimar Republic, also appears on one, five and ten pfennigs of the Federal Republic. To this writer's knowledge, Germany is the only country in Europe still operating branch mints; A - Berlin; D - Munich; F - Stuttgart; G - Karlsruhe and J - Hamburg.
Recorded mintage: unknown but likely common in all grades.
Specification: 2.27 g., Copper Plated Steel, 16.3 mm diameter. Obv: Oak leaves by Rolf Lederbogen; Rev: Denomination and globe by Luc Luycx; Edge: Plain.
Catalog reference: KM 207.
- Michael, Thomas, and Tracy L. Schmidt, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 2001-Date, 13th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2018.
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