MNRDC Congo

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by micbraun, Aug 25, 2021.

  1. micbraun

    micbraun coindiccted

    I am currently in Congo (DRC). If you didn’t know, this is one of the richest (natural resources) but at the same time poorest (GDP 222/225) countries in the world.

    Today I’ve been visiting the National Museum of Congo (MNRDC) in Ngaliema/Kinshasa and was surprised to see a couple of coins. Now I’ve got your full attention, right? :-D

    Unfortunately I couldn’t find anybody to tell me more about those, so I’ll just post some pictures. Let me know what you think or know about those coins.

    C9E1E3CE-906F-473A-9AC7-25F31A06604E.jpeg

    -Michael

    @Seattlite86
    @Rheingold
    @Eduard
     
    Last edited: Aug 25, 2021
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  3. micbraun

    micbraun coindiccted

    Okay, here’s a picture of the coins from a different angle:

    527F979A-2B79-4F74-B797-CA4B7195D30E.jpeg

    EN translation: Palata plates, Lower Congo

    used as currency in colonial times, these aluminum plates were used to pay taxes.


    Not coin-related, but I still wanted to share some highlights with you:

    Masque Yaka (Bandundu province)
    433FEA57-3F88-4CE8-97E3-CD691C47F3C4.jpeg

    Masque Mwana Pwo Tshokwe (Kasaï-Occidental province)
    75C1AE0B-38A1-4C75-B0A8-F14C3585C7EB.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Aug 25, 2021
  4. mrbadexample

    mrbadexample Well-Known Member

    I like these, especially the chunky 10 centimes. :)

    Congo Free State 1 centime 1887 (3).jpg Congo Free State 2 centimes 1888 (2a).jpg Congo Free State 5 centimes 1887 (2a).jpg Congo Free State 10 centimes 1889 (3).jpg
     
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  5. Jim Dale

    Jim Dale Well-Known Member

    WOW! And double WOW! I've never seen anything like those coins. Probably for the last 50 years I've lived in the United States Georgia and North Carolina.
     
  6. talerman

    talerman Well-Known Member

    I was there in 2017. The museum was then housed in some old buildings inside Mobutu's old palace complex and you had to pay a small bribe to the soldiers at the outer gate to enter the area. Only 2 or 3 rooms were open. I was told the Koreans ( ?) were building a new museum. Has it opened ?
     
  7. micbraun

    micbraun coindiccted

    The MNRDC is still at the same place (or next door) but it’s now a “real” museum. Apparently the Koreans (KOICA) funded it. There were only a couple of small expositions, but they have a nice restaurant there, so altogether it’s certainly worth a visit.
     
  8. Muzyck

    Muzyck Rabbits!

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  9. coin_nut

    coin_nut Well-Known Member

    I would like to get one of those big, copper Katanga crosses. Wonder if you could buy one (or more?) there? Also some of the old Belgian Congo coins are very desirable. Check around junk stores, etc. 1944 BE-Congo 1 f.jpg 1946 BE-Congo 1 f.jpg 1946 BE-Congo 2 f.jpg 1943 BE-Congo 2 f.jpg Katanga Cross.jpg
     
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  10. willieboyd2

    willieboyd2 First Class Poster

    Interesting post! I suppose that the coins and aluminum tokens were part of an ornament.

    I recently achieved one of my numismatic goals. I had wanted to have one of these big coins since I was a kid in 1964 when I saw one in R. S. Yeoman's book A Catalog of Modern World Coins.

    [​IMG]
    Belgian Congo 50 Francs 1944
    Silver, 35 mm, 17.37 gm, 500 fine
    Obverse: Elephant facing left / 1944
    Reverse: BANQUE DU CONGO BELGE (French) / BANK VAN BELGISCH CONGO (Flemish) / 50 FR
    Mint: South African Mint in Pretoria

    :)
     
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  11. coin_nut

    coin_nut Well-Known Member

    I want one too.
     
  12. Bardolph

    Bardolph Active Member

    Kin la Belle, as the locals used to call it when I was there in the 1970s. I picked up some very good artefacts at very reasonable prices, but no old coins, though on each visit I brought back handfuls of coins, some practically uncirculated, and a few scruffy old banknotes
     
  13. tibor

    tibor Supporter! Supporter

    Stay safe and hurry home!
     
  14. mrbadexample

    mrbadexample Well-Known Member

    Is it just me that can't unsee the spelling here?

    Belgish.jpg
     
  15. coin_nut

    coin_nut Well-Known Member

    Belgian coins routinely use either French or Flemish spellings, so please do not be alarmed at what looks like a dubious spelling to you. I think some have Dutch or German words also. Most Belgians are very multi lingual, and that makes them very employable in the world market.
     
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  16. coin_nut

    coin_nut Well-Known Member

    There is an old one that goes: If you speak 3 languages, you are tri lingual. If you speak 2 languages you are bi lingual. If you speak one language, you are American.
    Yes, I carry an American passport, yet I can converse in several different languages.
     
  17. mrbadexample

    mrbadexample Well-Known Member

    You're missing the point I think. All the others are BELGISCH, it's only the 2Fr that's missing the C.
     
  18. Maxfli

    Maxfli Well-Known Member

    Lots of interesting coins from the Belgian Congo. I have one that I can't photograph right now because I had shoulder surgery this morning, but it looks like this:

    Bel_Congo_JE145-2070.jpg
     
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