Difference between revisions of "Hannover 1707 24 mariengroschen"
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* [[Hannover 1705-HB 4 pfennig|1705-HB 4 pfennig, leaping stallion obverse]] | * [[Hannover 1705-HB 4 pfennig|1705-HB 4 pfennig, leaping stallion obverse]] | ||
* [[Hannover 1707-HB thaler Dav-2062|1707 "St. Andrew" thaler]] | * [[Hannover 1707-HB thaler Dav-2062|1707 "St. Andrew" thaler]] | ||
| − | * [[Hannover 1707-RB thaler Dav-2065|1707-RB thaler, | + | * [[Hannover 1707-RB thaler Dav-2065|1707-RB thaler, wild man reverse]] |
* [[Hannover 1710 24 mariengroschen|1710 24 mariengroschen]] | * [[Hannover 1710 24 mariengroschen|1710 24 mariengroschen]] | ||
* [[Hannover 1711-HB 2/3 thaler KM-67|1711-HB ⅔ thaler, leaping stallion, blank central escutcheon]] | * [[Hannover 1711-HB 2/3 thaler KM-67|1711-HB ⅔ thaler, leaping stallion, blank central escutcheon]] | ||
Revision as of 10:30, 7 June 2023
The mythical creature on the obverse is a wild man of the forest. Elector Georg Ludwig (1698-1727) became king George I of England in 1714. This type was struck 1701-11; 24 mariengroschen = 2/3 thaler. Hannover struck this denomination until 1789. The Brunswick coinages are among the most complicated series of German states issues outside of Saxony. The SCWC lists coins for Brunswick-Blankenburg, Brunswick-Lüneberg-Calenberg-Hannover, Brunswick-Lüneberg-Celle and Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel. Hannover was the most important and eventually absorbed the others before itself being annexed by Prussia in 1866.
Recorded mintage: unknown but fairly common.
Specification: silver.
Catalog reference: Welter 2158, Dav. 423, KM 15.
- Michael, Thomas, Standard Catalog of World Coins, 1701-1800, 7th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2016.
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