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The Royal Mint of Denmark (Danish: Den Kongelige Mønt) is a mint established by the Danish monarchy in the early 16th century, which currently by law is the only company allowed to mint the Danish currency . It is owned by the Danish State and administered as a subsidiary of the Danish Central Bank (Danmarks Nationalbank).
Prague Mint: 2011 Private [14] Denmark: Royal Danish Mint: 1739 Danmarks Nationalbank Egypt: Central Bank of Egypt: 1961 Fiji: Reserve Bank of Fiji: 1984 State-owned Finland: Mint of Finland: 1860 France: Monnaie de Paris: 864 [15] Overseas France: Institut d'émission d'Outre-Mer: 1966 [16] Germany: Staatliche Münzen Baden-Württemberg: 1998 ...
1 Coins issued from the Royal Danish Mint from 1848 to 1972. ... Commemorative coins have been issued by the Royal Danish Mint in Denmark since 1848.
The Danish krone was minted by the Royal Mint of Denmark and banknotes were printed by the Danish National Bank until 1975, when the mint was made a subsidiary of the National Bank. In 2014, it was decided to stop minting and printing of the krone in Denmark, but the work would be outsourced, and on 20 December 2016, the last notes were printed ...
On the reverse of the coin the figure "25" is placed in the centre. Above, the heart of the Royal Mint is embossed. The use of the heart is a century-old tradition, originally indicating the mint master, later the place of minting. Today, the mint mark serves no practical purpose since Danish coins are minted in only one place.
The reverse featured the coat of arms of Denmark with the denomination written underneath. [1] The coin was minted in the years 1875, 1876, 1892, and 1898. [2] A second silver krone was minted in 1915 and 1916, with King Christian X of Denmark on the obverse. [3] It was struck to the same specifications as the previous coin. [4]
Before Denmark's 2000 referendum on the issue, Danmarks Nationalbank and the Royal Mint were asked by the Ministry of Economics to propose possible designs for the future Danish euro coins. The suggested design was based on the designs of the Danish 10- and 20-krone coins, with Queen Margrethe II on the front, and the 25- and 50-øre coins ...
The present fifty øre coin was introduced into circulation on 3 July 1989 after the demonetisation of the five and ten øre coins. Its obverse features the crown of King Christian V of Denmark. The coin is composed of a bronze of 97% copper, 2.5% zinc and 0.5% tin. As of August 2024, 50 øre worth 7.4 US cents.