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    Posted

    Hallo Gents,

    not much to go on but:-

    It has the name ERNST on it,

    but is that Ernst I or Ernst II??

    Rear has a wreath inside this the words "DEN VERDIENST"

    over a crown.

    Kevin in Deva.

    Posted

    Hi Kev

    it is Ernst I

    Christophe

    Hallo Christophe :cheers:

    And would it be the one for "Verdienst Und Wissenshaft"(sp?)

    and could you give an approx value?

    Kevin in Deva :beer:

    Posted

    It seems to be the medal for Kunst und Wissenschaft. in silvre without crown. In my Nimmergut's book from 1995-1996, the price is 555 DM, now the same in euros.

    Christophe

    Posted

    In my Nimmergut's catalogue from 2009, the value is 1000?...

    :cheers:

    Thats possibly for the full size, the picture is of the mini version. :beer:

    Posted

    It seems to be the medal for Kunst und Wissenschaft. in silvre without crown. In my Nimmergut's book from 1995-1996, the price is 555 DM, now the same in euros.

    Christophe

    Thanks for your reply. :cheers:

    Just got a picture of the rear. It has a Crown.

    Kevin in Deva. :beer:

    Guest Rick Research
    Posted

    Waaaaaaaaaay before anything I know anything about, but from later pieces, I am wondering IF this could possibly be a numismatic "mule"-- that is, obverse and reverse dies from TWO different awards married together carelessly. After all, we always wonder why anyone bothered with a reverse on a lapel chain mini anyway--

    so could this be (assuming the front to be more important) some OTHER award that got the wrong back stamped on and... nobody really cared? :rolleyes:

    Posted

    Waaaaaaaaaay before anything I know anything about, but from later pieces, I am wondering IF this could possibly be a numismatic "mule"-- that is, obverse and reverse dies from TWO different awards married together carelessly. After all, we always wonder why anyone bothered with a reverse on a lapel chain mini anyway--

    so could this be (assuming the front to be more important) some OTHER award that got the wrong back stamped on and... nobody really cared? :rolleyes:

    I think that Rick has it.

    This mini is interesting, very interesting. The bust is definitely that of Ernst II;

    but the inscription around the rim does not indicate this (no ?II?), so it could be

    interpreted as being an Ernst I award; but creating such a medal with that bust

    of Ernst II during the reign of Ernst I is quite unlikely.

    According to Nimmergut, the reverse is correct for the Ernst I medals for

    ?special earnings in civil life? which were awarded back in 1835-1837 as

    well as the arts and science medals of 1858-1893 and 1895-1898(?).

    My guess is that this mini was intended to represent a Duke Ernst medal, for

    which the obverse on this mini is correct. The reverse of these medals is very

    complex. So rather than create a new die for one of these complex reverses, the

    jeweler used an ?in stock? reverse or made a new one with the simpler design

    which we see here.

    As Beau pointed out and as near as I can tell... no such animal. Reminds me of

    my Hannoverian lifesaving mini with the George bust; again, never existed and

    as Rick indicates, in essence, who ever looks at the reverse of a mini, a point that

    has often amazed me - the detail which is often found on the reverse of minis.

    Regards,

    Wild Card

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