Germany. Hamburg. 1876. 2 Mark. 11.08g. Silver (.900). XF. C613. RI.31

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Germany. Hamburg. 1876. 2 Mark. 11.08g. Silver (.900). XF. C613. RI.31

Interesting historical facts

  1. A Free City inside an Empire
    Hamburg was one of the few “Free and Hanseatic Cities” allowed to issue its own coin designs after Germany united in 1871. The imperial eagle on one side and Hamburg’s arms on the other symbolize both local pride and imperial unity.

  2. First generation of German Mark coins
    1876 was among the earliest years of the new Mark currency, replacing dozens of regional money systems. This coin represents the birth of a unified German economy under Kaiser Wilhelm I.

  3. Design full of meaning
    The castle and lions have appeared on Hamburg’s seals since the Middle Ages — the castle stands for the fortified port city; the open gate represents freedom and trade.

  4. Silver standard precision
    Each 2 Mark contained exactly 10 grams of pure silver (11.111 g × 0.900). This reflected the strict Reich silver standard — 500 Marks equaled one pound of fine silver.

  5. Struck on world-class machinery
    The Hamburg Mint used advanced Gräbener presses, famous for extremely sharp details — that’s why the lions and brickwork are still crisp on well-kept examples today.

  6. Imperial motto on larger coins only
    Unlike 5 Mark pieces with the inscription GOTT MIT UNS, this 2 Mark has a milled edge, part of anti-clipping security then considered cutting-edge.

  7. Hanseatic heritage
    Hamburg had been a member of the medieval Hanseatic League — a network of trading cities. This coin quietly celebrates that merchant legacy in a new industrial era.

  8. Global silver trade link
    Much of the silver for these coins came from Saxon and Bohemian mines traded through Hamburg’s own bullion market — meaning the city literally minted its trade wealth.

  9. A survivor of transition
    Millions were melted during World War I to recover silver for the war effort, making high-grade examples scarcer than their mintage suggests.

  10. Collectible symbolism
    To collectors today, the coin stands for freedom, trade, and the dawn of modern Germany — small in size but large in meaning.

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