1914 Medal Zetzmann-1064 Ag SP (PCGS#810463)
February 2020 Collectors Choice Online Auction World Coins
- 拍卖行
- Stack's Bowers
- 批号
- 70637
- 等级
- SP66
- 价格
- 1,177
- 详细说明
- GERMANY. Empire. Storming of Petrikau by the Austrians Silver Medal, 1914. Oertel Mint in Berlin. PCGS SPECIMEN-66 Gold Shield.
Zetz-1064. Diameter: 15mm; Weight: 1.35 gms. Siegespfennig (Victory Penny) series. Obverse: Victory flying left, holding wreath and sword; Reverse: ERSTÜRMUNG / VON / PETRIKAU / DURCH DIE / ÖSTERREICHER / 18 DEZ 1914 in six lines. Deeply toned, with brilliant luster and tremendous hues of electric cobalt, amber, and burnt sienna. RARE this attractive, and the sole representative for the type in the PCGS census.
Medals have long served a role in propaganda, promoting the views of one side or attacking those of another. Nowhere is this more prevalent than the first World War, during which numerous issues were produced and promoted-each with their own agenda. One such series, the Siegespfennige ("Victory Pennies"), was inspired by a similar series issued nearly 100 years prior and which commemorated the Wars of Liberation against Napoleon from 1813-1815.
Each of these medals, like their predecessors, had a consistent obverse motif (an allegorical representation of Victory flying with a sword and wreath) and reverse composition (reference to a battle or event, along with its date and a serial number, adding to its collector angle). They were produced by Otto Oertel's medal mint in Berlin, and subsequently promoted there by the coin dealer Rudolph Kube for the price of 0.75 Marks each, being released in various batches following significant and decisive victories in order to ensure public support and attention for the war effort. In total, 106 of these tiny medals (very similar in size and feel to a U.S. silver "trime" or 3 cent piece) were released, covering the events from August 1914 through September 1915. The largest portion of these pieces were produced for that very first month, while the output varied periodically, dipping during the spring of 1915 and picking up again in that fall, only to fade in popularity and be discontinued as the fatigue for the war increased. Intended to be clasped for inclusion with traditional folk costumes, they allowed their purchaser the chance to "wear" their patriotism. In the end, however, propaganda can only paint a picture, and seeing the death and destruction firsthand will eventually leave a more lasting, disillusioned impact-mirrored perfectly by their dwindling sales and appeal toward the end of 1915.
Read more about this item in our Coin of the Week blog post, here.
Estimate: $100 - $150.
Click here for certification details from PCGS.
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