NEWP: 1803 Hamburg Millennium Medal
Zohar
Posts: 6,688 ✭✭✭✭✭
Bought this on the Kunker sale. Always liked this city view which somewhat resembles the 1653 dated Dadler medal I have below commemorating the 5 year anniversary of the end of the 30 year war. 1803. Hamburg. Commemorating the 1000-year millennium jubilee celebration of the city. Engraved by D. Loos & J.V.Döll. 39.32mm, 18.81gr. Silver. Obv. Tyche (city goddess) seated below 1000-year old oak-tree holding staff, caduceus (staff of Mercure) and City shield of Hamburg. Cornucopia (horn of plenty) below, birds flying around. Rev. Bird´s eye view of the Inner Alster Lake waterfront with beautiful minimalistic details. Genius in clouds above. References: Nuber 4/6, Grotemeyer 43/45, Gaed. 2000. Sommer A102.


Habsburg Talers
TalerUniverse.com is a curated numismatic project dedicated to the silver talers, crowns, and medals of the Habsburg Empire and the Holy Roman Empire, spanning the 16th–18th centuries. The collection emphasizes historically significant issues, rare mint varieties, and high-grade NGC/PCGS examples, presented with detailed historical context, scholarly references, and high-resolution photography. TalerUniverse aims to serve both as a private collection showcase and a growing reference resource for collectors, researchers, and students of early-modern European coinage.
TalerUniverse.com is a curated numismatic project dedicated to the silver talers, crowns, and medals of the Habsburg Empire and the Holy Roman Empire, spanning the 16th–18th centuries. The collection emphasizes historically significant issues, rare mint varieties, and high-grade NGC/PCGS examples, presented with detailed historical context, scholarly references, and high-resolution photography. TalerUniverse aims to serve both as a private collection showcase and a growing reference resource for collectors, researchers, and students of early-modern European coinage.
8
Comments
A beautiful medal.
Agree!
Stunning!
Virtus Collection - Renaissance and Baroque Medals
Great addition Zohar. Amazing amount of detail squeezed onto a 39 mm planchet.
Yup - well done! A worthy addition!
Very cool history on that one!
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