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Swiss shooting taler question - classifications

Did Davenport classify the swiss shooting talers also? For example, the 1869 Zug piece has a classification of:

KM-S10 (from Krause)
D-384

Where does the D-384 come from?


Comments

  • ZoharZohar Posts: 6,698 ✭✭✭✭✭
    He did in the European Crowns Since 1800 volume.
    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.
  • spoonspoon Posts: 2,798 ✭✭✭
  • worldcoinguyworldcoinguy Posts: 3,050 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Thanks Zohar. I guess I really need to invest in that series at some point. image
  • ZoharZohar Posts: 6,698 ✭✭✭✭✭
    They are all relatively inexpensive except the 15-16th century volume.
    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.
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