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Replies: 17 / Views: 13,584 |
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
Check out Joel Anderson's website. Usually has quite a few Nazi coins for sale. Has been around a long time.
Lots of other interesting stuff as well.
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Valued Member
 United States
116 Posts |
I have checked out Mr.Anderson's website before and I'm thinking buying some from him. He sells some unusual coins!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
842 Posts |
I collect them! But the ones I have I find in the local coin shop's 10 cent bin and at flea markets. Got about 20 of them at this point.
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Valued Member
 United States
116 Posts |
ancientcoinguy , could you please post some pictures?
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New Member
United States
32 Posts |
I have a few. Got maybe a half dozen 5 Reichspfennig and a silver 5 reichsmark. There's always a few guys at gun shows selling German WWII, thats where I got the 5 Reichspfennigs. Got the 5 reichsmark at a coin show.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2589 Posts |
I usually have some up on my ebay account, there always seems to be a good supply listed by various sellers on ebay. Once you pass 250 posts here on the forum I would recommend posting in the buy section.
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Valued Member
Australia
432 Posts |
You need to make some contacts with dealers in Germany; generally ebay and etc is overpriced, as ppl seem to think that because its 'Nazi' its 'rare'. Wrong... Like all German periods, there are the odd Key Mintmark/Year coins that are going to be harder to get, but again, this is where dealers can help also! Now, as a general price guide, I recommend the Beutler-site --> http://www.beutler-muenzen.de/rubrik52.htm BUT remember, these guys are sellers, etc; so the general rule I follow is, pay the quoted priced for a grade lower. IE, if you're after an EF coin, which is listed on Beutler for 17,00EUR (EF), if you're dealing directly with ppl, over ebay and even directly with some German dealers, you want to be paying the priced that is listed for VF (say 11,00EUR as an example). My main contact and I work like this. Also, go learn some German - it will help - and also learn to deal in EUR; if you're buying from Europe, its the currency they want!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
539 Posts |
zaggy - you deal with dealers in Germany for Third Reich material? I thought they couldn't do that in Germany. I'm not looking to tell but if that is true then I most certainly need to have my son (who lives in Germany) look for these. I know the German coin market is really hot (I guess they have a lot of money to spend on coins these days) but my daughter-in-law told me they could not sell Third Reich coins. She must have been wrong or didn't understand the laws.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
4227 Posts |
I notice that the swastika on the coins in the link above is covered in his photos, would that be because of the law mentioned?
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
Zaggy:
I have never studied German language, but without any training at all, I am slowly getting my brain around it enough to read it acceptably. Much like a kid learns a language. You are in front of a screen by yourself only, and you have no choice but to find out for yourself, with no help.
I have a classic Mercedes, and I am often across German websites for technical information and forums.
This experience gives me access to German numismatic websites.
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Valued Member
United States
259 Posts |
I spent 8 years in Germany, and acquired some pre- euro coins from Germany and surrounding countries. There are some German collectors, who want US coins in exchange for theirs. Many of them have access to such coins. Speaking German can help, but not nessessary.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2589 Posts |
Yes it technically is illegal to buy and sell nazi era coins that have swatstikas, but people sell them anyway
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Pillar of the Community
Germany
1238 Posts |
Quote: I notice that the swastika on the coins in the link above is covered in his photos, would that be because of the law mentioned?
No. I think that is primarily because some German dealers also sell on ebay. And ebay (at least here in DE) does not allow displaying the swastika. Have a look at MA-Shops for example. http://www.ma-shops.de/deutschesrei...rittes+Reich Some sellers there will cover the swastika or "cut it out", others display the coins as they are. What is illegal here is nazi propaganda, ie. modern medals for example. But it sure is not against the law to buy and sell those coins here. Guess the primary difference is that here collectors are not as interested in nazi coins as collectors in some other countries: If people collect them, it's because they are part of a German Empire, or maybe Germany after 1871, collection - nothing more, nothing less. Christian
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Pillar of the Community
Germany
1238 Posts |
Quote: Yes it technically is illegal to buy and sell nazi era coins that have swatstikas, but people sell them anyway
May be illegal in your country. It sure is not illegal in Germany. See the link in my previous post for example. Oh, and have a look at the locations of those sellers. Christian
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2589 Posts |
It actually depends on how one is selling them, if one is selling them as a historical artifact or a collectable it is legal. If one is selling them in bulk to a radical organization, such as the German People's Union, that would be illegal. The law regulates how the symbol is used in society and doesn't completely ban it.
As for the United States there are very few restrictions on buying and selling coins and those that do exist are mostly focused on stolen mint property or items from countries under embargo. -XoG
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Replies: 17 / Views: 13,584 |
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