Estimate: 20.000 EuroBrandenburg.
Friedrich Wilhelm, the Great Elector.
Ducat 1686 LCS, Berlin.
Extremely rare.
Attractive piece.
36
Estimate: 50.000 EuroBavaria.
Maximilian II.
Ducat 1855.
Only a few pieces are known.
Extremely fine-uncirculated.
105
Estimate: 125.000 EuroBrunswick-Bevern.
Ferdinand Albrecht I.
Löser in the weight of 4 Reichstalers 1670, Clausthal.
Extremely rare.
Attractive piece.
135
Estimate: 100.000 EuroLippe.
Friedrich Adolf.
5 Ducats 1711, Detmold.
Only known piece.
Extremely fine-uncirculated.
184
Estimate: 50.000 EuroCity of Nuremberg.
10 Ducats 1630.
Extremely rare.
Extremely fine.
198
Estimate: 40.000 EuroCity of Regensburg.
6 Ducats, n. d. (1765-1790), with the title of Joseph II.
NGC MS 62 PL.
Extremely rare.
Attractive piece from polished dies.
Almost uncirculaed.
251
Estimate: 125.000 EuroHolstein-Gottorp.
Johann Adolf, 1590-1616.
Portugalöser (10 ducats) n.d., Eutin.
Extremely rare and of particular
significance in monetary history.
Attractive piece.
295
Estimate: 200.000 EuroRDR.
Leopold I, 1657-1705.
20 Ducats, n. d. (after 1666), Hall,
by M. König.
Extremely rare.
Almost extremely fine.
376
Estimate: 125.000 EuroArchbishopric of Salzburg.
20 Ducats 1687.
NGC AU 58.
Extremely rare.
Extremely fine.
423
Estimate: 40.000 EuroVienna.
Salvator medal in the weight of 24 Ducats,
n. d. (after 1843), by K. Lange.
NGC PF 61.
Extremely rare.
Proof.
431
Archive: People and Markets

Mont-Saint-Michel

You need to hold the “Mont-Saint-Michel” in your hand to really appreciate the high level of minting craftsmanship that has gone into this numismatic work of art. Against a deeply concave background, the legendary fortress of the archangel Michael is depicted in three-dimensional relief.

Inhalt

The picturesque location and impressive architecture fascinate everyone who is lucky enough to experience this wonderful symbiosis of art and nature. CIT has rendered this fascination into numismatic items.

The picturesque location and impressive architecture fascinate everyone who is lucky enough to experience this wonderful symbiosis of art and nature. CIT has rendered this fascination into numismatic items.

The coin depicts every detail of the monastic island, which – in the image – has just been closed off from the mainland by the tide. Anyone visiting the actual UNESCO World Heritage Site would be able to use this commemorative coin to identify every single house, tower and rock depicted in its cityscape. CIT pays tribute to the impressive island with no less than four coins:

  • 1 dollar, 50g copper
  • 5 dollars, 0.5g gold
  • 10 dollars, 2 ounces of silver
  • 25 dollars, 5 ounces of silver

The coins will be produced at B. H. Mayer’s Kunstprägeanstalt in Munich using the smartminting® technique.

Cook Islands / 25 Dollars /. Silver .999 / 5 oz / 65 mm / Mintage: 500.

Cook Islands / 25 Dollars /. Silver .999 / 5 oz / 65 mm / Mintage: 500.

Cook Islands / 1 Dollar / Copper / 50 g / 38.61 mm / Mintage: 5,000.

Cook Islands / 1 Dollar / Copper / 50 g / 38.61 mm / Mintage: 5,000.

CIT’s Mont-Saint-Michel in Silver and copper

The concave obverse depicts the island of Mont-Saint-Michel, surrounded by the sea, from a bird’s eye view. In the background, a stylised glass window with the inscription MONT / SAINT MICHEL / 1023-2023.

The reverse features a sketch of Mont-Saint-Michel, with the silhouette of a couple in front of it. In the left field a map of France with the location marked, above the portrait of Elizabeth II, below IRB (= Ian Rank-Broadley), above the circumscription ELIZABETH II COOK ISLANDS, below nominal. On the rim a description of Mont-Saint-Michel.

Cook Islands / 5 Dollars / Gold .9999 / 0.5 g / 11 mm / Mintage: 5,000.

Cook Islands / 5 Dollars / Gold .9999 / 0.5 g / 11 mm / Mintage: 5,000.

CIT’s Mont-Saint-Michel in Gold

One side depicts Mont-Saint-Michel from a bird’s eye view on a stylised glass window, above MONT / SAINT / MICHEL, below 1023-2023.

The other side features a portrait of Elizabeth II, below IRB (= Ian Rank-Broadley), around it the circumscription ELIZABETH II COOK ISLANDS 5 DOLLARS.

Background

It is said that the archangel Michael himself commissioned Bishop Aubert of Avranches to build a church in 708 AD. For the location of his sanctuary, the commander of the heavenly hosts requested a lonely rock off the Norman coast, which is completely closed off from the mainland during high tide. Bishop Aubert obeyed and started building a monastery, which many generations of worshippers have continued to work on ever since. Today, Mont-Saint-Michel attracts around 3.5 million visitors every year. Its picturesque location and impressive architecture will captivate anybody who is lucky enough to experience this wonderful symbiosis between art and nature.

Mont-Saint-Michel seen from the bridge. Photo: Antoine Lamielle via Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0.

Mont-Saint-Michel seen from the bridge. Photo: Antoine Lamielle via Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0.

For all those who can’t ever forget Mont-Saint-Michel, CIT presents this new commemorative coin, which will be issued in four different versions. In addition to the copper and two colored silver versions, CIT will also be issuing a small gold coin that, despite its weight of 0.5 g, still appears almost monumental.

If you want to experience all three dimensions of this coin, be sure to watch the accompanying video:

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Watch in this short video what Mont-Saint-Michel looks like in real life:

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