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Rest in Peace
United States
10625 Posts |
Quote: He was a shy, reserved kind of guy.  So was Genghis Khan...
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7968 Posts |
Quote: Neither of those really explain why Hindenburg was on most of their silver coins, though. @finn235, I think we were posting at the same time. Those Hindenburg coins are probably best compared to something like the Roosevelt dime or Kennedy half. Issued shortly after the death, not while in office.
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Pillar of the Community
 Canada
5404 Posts |
There are numerous examples of Hitler Portrait medals. These are designated by Colbert/ Hyder Numbers CH#. "Medallic Portraits Of Adolf Hitler."
Edited by Pacificoin 05/18/2018 11:31 am
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4883 Posts |
Quote: There are numerous examples of Hitler Portrait medals. There was also a design competition that led to the production of a 1942 dated pattern 5 Reichsmark bearing Hitler's likeness. Why this was never produced probably owes something to the general European convention was that a portrait on a coin is that of the reigning monarch. Putting his megalomania on the shelf in this one instance, I think Hitler rightly perceived that being presented in such a manner would rather suggest he was more or less "Wilhelm III" which would run counter to both his personal loathing of royalty as an institution as well as the propaganda that promoted his "man of the people" image.
Colligo ergo sum
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7968 Posts |
Quote: the general European convention was that a portrait on a coin is that of the reigning monarch Agree. This is why nations like France and Switzerland had no such portrait on their coins in the 20th century. The German monarchy was abolished in 1918, and even before that did not have a portrait of the emperor on coins for common circulation. It would have been an aberration for Hitler's portrait to be on German coins.
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Moderator
 United States
190135 Posts |
 to the Community!
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Bedrock of the Community
Canada
24885 Posts |
 To the Forum.
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Rest in Peace
10197 Posts |
Thought it had to do with Adolp and his belief in the occult, coins were issued posthoumsly, he feared death greatly.
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
3831 Posts |
Who knows, that's also another question why Stalin isn't on Soviet coins either.
Perhaps they weren't keen on the idea of general public defacing their portraits. Same with some of the craziest dictatorship coins.
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Moderator
 Australia
16874 Posts |
It is my understanding - and I cannot cite any reference as to where I heard this - that while it is difficult to get into Hitler's mind, Hitler's thinking went something like this. Only monarchs put their portrait on coins. But the Holy Roman Empire (the First Reich) and the German monarchy (the Second Reich) were failures - they both failed to bring the German people into their manifest destiny of world domination. He, and his Third Reich, would succeed where the emperors of the past had failed. But until that day, when German hegemony became a reality and Germany actually won a war, Hitler would never place himself on a level with the kings of old - either by formally claiming an imperial title for himself, or by behaving as a king (such as putting his portrait on the coinage). There is a very rare Vichy French coin, the five francs of 1941. It bears the portrait of the Nazi puppet, the Vichy French ruler Field Marshal Petain. It is said (and again, I cannot cite a source) that Hitler was personally incensed that his French puppet put his portrait on French coins, before Hitler himself was ready to do likewise. So he ordered the French to withdraw and destroy the coins. Hence, their current rarity. I do not know how true this is, especially in the light of the Slovakian puppet coinage from 1939 depicting the Slovak leader, Jozef Tiso.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Pillar of the Community
United States
541 Posts |
Hitler did not want his portrait on a coin. He knew history and didn't want to end up like French King Louis XVI who was captured and beheaded after someone recognized him from his portrait on his coins.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
541 Posts |
By the way here is an example of Louis XVI's portrait 
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Bedrock of the Community
Canada
24885 Posts |
Louis XVI...clear portrait  
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Pillar of the Community
United States
541 Posts |
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New Member
United States
2 Posts |
One of the world war two specials on history channel repeated the report that he ordered his face to not be on coins until after the war was "won". He wasn't shy. He was on tons of cigarette cards; posters and stamps. He showed on lots of news reels and newspaper photos too. After his own people tried to blow him up I don't think that he was worried about a trial or execution.
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