New notgeld pickups

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by Hiddendragon, May 4, 2023.

  1. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    At the recent Central States show I picked up several notgeld and similar items. This is an interest area of mine, and while I've never made a concerted effort to build my collection of these, I pick them up whenever I come across them. I got all of these from one or two dealers' junk bins at the show. There are items here from both Germany and France. Here are the German ones. 1917 stettin 5 pfennig.jpg 1918 braunschweig 10 pfennig.jpg 1918 frankenthal 10 pfennig.jpg 1919 trier 10 pfennig.jpg 1920 aachen 1 groschen.jpg 1920 aachen 10 pfennig.jpg 1923 hamburg five hundreths mark.jpg 1923 hamburg tenth mark.jpg
     
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  3. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    Here are the French ones.

    1917 bayonne 5 centimes.jpg 1918 algiers 10 centimes.jpg 1920 amiens 10 centimes.jpg 1922 blois 5 centimes.jpg
     
  4. chuckylucky5

    chuckylucky5 Well-Known Member

    I too do not make a concerted effort to collect the notgeld coins, although I am always on the lookout for ones I don't have. I currently have examples from 709 different locations.
     
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  5. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    Really nice coins.
    I know nothing about these coins. Were they all minted in aluminum or zinc?
     
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  6. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    Mostly. A few of these examples are in iron also. They were made during and right after World War I when there must have been a shortage of coinage. There's also some porcelain ones from Germany.
     
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  7. chuckylucky5

    chuckylucky5 Well-Known Member

    I also have examples in brass, clay, iron, nickel, cardboard and porcelain.
     
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  8. The Eidolon

    The Eidolon Well-Known Member

    I think the silver price spiked after WW1 and drove most countries' silver coinage out of circulation. I think that's why the UK switched from 92.5% to 50% fine in 1920 as well. Partly wartime inflation, partly suspending the convertibility of paper money to gold during the war drove up demand for silver. Terrible economic times tend to lead to very interesting coinage! Anyway, the French "notgeld" is very cool, I haven't seen them before. Thanks for posting. Silver_price_by_year_1920_1921_1922_1923_1924_1925_1926_1927_1928_1929_SD_Bullion_SDBullion.com.png
     
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