Showing posts with label Austrian Coins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austrian Coins. Show all posts

Austria 100 Schilling Coin 1991 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart at the Piano

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart at the PianoAustria 100 Schilling Coin

Austria 100 Schilling Coin 1991 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart at the Piano
Commemorative issue: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in Burgtheater

Obverse: Portrait of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart at the Piano.
Lettering: 1756-1791 W. A. MOZART.
Engraver: Thomas Pesendorfer.

Reverse: Mozart's Vienna Years - Burgtheater, value below.
Lettering: REPUBLIK ÖSTERREICH 19 ALTES 91 BURGTHEATER 100 SCHILLING.
Engraver: Thomas Pesenforfer.

Edge: Reeded.
Value:  100 Schilling (100 ATS).
Metal:  Silver (.900).
Weight:  20 g.
Diameter:  34 mm.
Thickness:  1.9 mm.
Shape:  Round.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Coins




Austrian Gold Coins 8 Florins 20 Francs 1887 Emperor Franz Joseph I

Austrian Gold Coins 8 Florins 20 Francs, Emperor Franz Joseph IAustrian Gold Coins 8 Florins 20 Francs

Austrian Gold Coins 8 Florins 20 Francs 1887 Emperor Franz Joseph I

In addition to its historical value the Austrian 8 Florin / 20 Francs gold coin is of interest for carrying dual denomination. Bearing mintage dates between 1870 and 1892, each .900 pure coin has an actual gold content of .1867 oz.
  The dual denomination was created so the coin could be circulated domestically as 8 Florins and also recognized for pan-European trade worth 20 Francs. In certain ways the Austrian 8 Florin/20 Francs gold coin is the precursor to the present-day Euro.

The obverse bears the right side profile of Emperor Franz Joseph I, ruler of the Habsberg Empire, wearing a laurel wreath crown and heavy whiskers. Surrounding his portrait is the Latin inscription “FRANCISCVS IOSEPHVS I D G EMPERATOR ET REX” translating as "Franz Joseph by the Grace of God, Emperor and King".

The reverse shows the Austro-Hungarian imperial coat of arms framed with the inscription “IMPERIUM AUSTRIACUM” (Empire of Austria). The tail of the coat of arms separates the dual denominationa of 8 Fl. and 20 Fr., with the date appearing at the bottom. The coin's edge is lettered with Franz Joseph I's personal motto “VIRIBUS UNITIS” (With United Forces).

Years: 1870-1892.
Value: 8 Florins / 20 Francs (8).
Composition: Gold.
Fineness: 0.9000.
Weight: 6.4516 g.
AGW: 0.1867 oz.
Diameter: 21 mm.
Thickness: 1.2 mm.
Shape: Round.
Struck by the Austrian Mint.
174 000 exemplaires, KM 2269.

The currency of guilders in the 19th Century was a silver standard, although "Club crowns" from 1858 to 1865 (or 1866) were minted in gold. 1865 France, Belgium, Italy and Switzerland founded the the Latin Union, in which issues of the coins should regarding value, size, weight, etc. should be decided on. Within the Union, all coins should have been valid. Although Austria had signed a preliminary agreement with the Latin Union in 1867, it failed to achieve the required currency conditions for entry into the union. Nevertheless, as of 1870 a 8-guilder piece (= 8 Florin or 20 francs) and a 4-guilder piece (= 4 Florin or 10 Francs) were minted, which resembled the gold coins of the Latin Union. These coins were minted until 1892, the year in which the "crown currency" (English: Corona) was introduced in Austria. These so-called "trade gold coins", which have a premium on the current price of gold, as are gold bullion coins.





Emperor Franz Joseph I
Franz Josef I (English: Francis Joseph) Emperor of Austria, king of Hungary, (1830-1916), born in Vienna. The last significant Habsburg monarch.
  Franz Josef was the eldest son of Archduke Franz Karl (Francis Charles), who was brother and heir of Austrian Emperor Ferdinand I. Because his father renounced his right to the throne, Franz Josef became emperor when Ferdinand abdicated near the end of the revolution of 1848.
  By the time Franz Josef stepped onto the throne, Austria's position as a European "great power" was already in serious decline. Three external factors furthered Austria's decline.

1. -- Austria's "betrayal" of Russia in the Crimean War (1853-1856) seriously damaged Austro-Russian relations. Lingering Russian ill will was a factor in the July (1914) Crisis which led to the outbreak of WWI.
2. -- The unification of Italy provided a new threat to the empire. In the decade that followed, Austria lost nearly all of its Italian possessions, such as Lombardy and Venetia.
3. -- The rise of Prussian dominance of the German Confederation, and Austria's loss of the Austro-Prussian war in 1866. German unification in 1871 made Austria the lesser of the two German powers.
Austria was weakened by these reverses. Franz Josef had little choice but to negotiate with Hungary on its demands for autonomy. Austria and Hungary agreed to create a dual monarchy in which the two countries would be equal partners. Under the empire of Austria-Hungary, as it was known after 1867, Hungary had complete independence in internal affairs, but the two countries acted jointly in foreign affairs. (This fact contributed to the slowness of A-H's response to the murder of Franz Ferdinand).
  The same year, Franz Josef and Elizabeth were formally crowned king and queen of Hungary. (Franz Josef married Elizabeth, daughter of Duke Maximilian of Bavaria, in 1854. They had one son, Rudolf, and three daughters.) As the dual monarch, Franz Josef planned to grant some form of self-government to the Austrian Slavs, but the German and Magyar elites who actually controlled the empire opposed any sharing of power. The resulting dissatisfaction among Austrian Czechs and Serbs further weakened the Habsburg realms and caused increased friction with Russia, which championed the cause of Europe's Slavic peoples.
  Franz Josef's later years were marked by a series of tragedies in his family. In 1889 his only son and heir to the throne, Archduke Rudolf, committed suicide; Franz Josef's second younger brother, Karl Ludwig, had died in 1896 from illness due to bad water he drank while on a holy lands pilgrimage; in 1898 Elizabeth was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
  Succession to the Austrian throne was not simple. Following the suicide of Franz Josef's only son Rudolf, the next in succession would have been Franz Josef's younger brother Maximillian. Maximillian, however, had been executed by a firing squad in Mexico in 1867 after a 3 year reign as Emperor of Mexico. Karl Ludwig's oldest son, Franz Ferdinand replaced Rudolf as heir to the throne. Franz Ferdinand was assassinated by a Serbian nationalist in Sarajevo in June 1914. The assasination precipitated a crisis which led to the outbreak of World War I.
  Franz Josef died on November 21, 1916. He did not live to see Austria's defeat in the war. His grand nephew, Karl I assumed the throne for two years, but was the last Habsburg monarch.

Austrian Gold Coins 1 Ducat 1855 Emperor Franz Joseph I

Austrian Gold Coins Ducat Emperor Franz JosephAustrian Gold Coins Ducat

Austrian Gold Coins 1 Ducat 1855 Emperor Franz Joseph I

Obverse: Laureate head of Emperor Franz Joseph I, ruler of the Habsberg Empire right. Surrounding his portrait is the Latin inscription “FRANC ∙ IOS ∙ I ∙ D ∙ G ∙ AVSTRIAE IMPERATOR ∙” translating as "Franz Joseph I by the Grace of God Emperor of Austria".

Reverse: Crowned Imperial double eagle - Imperial Coat of Arms of the Empire of Austria, used from 1815 to 1866, framed with the inscription “GAL ∙ LOD ∙ ILL ∙ REX ∙ A ∙ A ∙ 1855 HVNG ∙ BOH ∙ LOMB ∙ ET VEN ∙” (King of Galicia, Lodomeria, Illyria, Hungary, Lombardy and Venice).

Composition: Gold.
Fineness: 0.986.
Weight: 3.4909 g.
AGW: 0.1107 oz.



Emperor Franz Joseph I
Franz Joseph, also called Francis Joseph (born August 18, 1830, Schloss Schönbrunn, near Vienna, Austria — died November 21, 1916, Schloss Schönbrunn), emperor of Austria (1848–1916) and king of Hungary (1867–1916), who divided his empire into the Dual Monarchy, in which Austria and Hungary coexisted as equal partners. In 1879 he formed an alliance with Prussian-led Germany, and in 1914 his ultimatum to Serbia led Austria and Germany into World War I.

Austrian Ducat Gold Coin
The word ducat is from Medieval Latin ducatus meaning “relating to a duke (or dukedom)”, and initially meant “duke’s coin” or a “duchy’s coin”. These historical gold coins were used in trade throughout Europe from medieval times to the late 20th century.
  The first gold ducats were produced in the year 1140 and the inscriptions and pictures changed considerably through the Middle Ages. One of the most common versions seen today is the Austrian 1 Ducat Gold Coin.
  The front of the Austrian 1 Ducat Gold Coin which features the likeness of Franz Joseph I who was born in 1848, and died in 1916. The reverse depicts the House of Habsburg’s coat of arms. The Habsburgs occupied the Holy Roman Empire throne from 1438 – 1740. They produced kings of Bohemia, England, Germany, Hungary, Croatia, Ireland, Portugal, Spain Dutch and Italian countries.
  The double-headed eagle or Imperial Eagle was a symbol of the Holy Roman Empire. Above the Imperial Eagle is the Imperial Crown worn by Holy Roman Emperors from the House of Habsburg becoming the crown of Austria after the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire. The Imperial Eagle holds the Imperial Regalia or the crown jewels. The Imperial Eagle holds the Imperial Sword, which was used during coronations and holds the Imperial Orb, a symbol of divine right.
  Today’s modern Austrian 1 Ducat Gold Coin follows in the steps of the Austrian 100 Corona because those dated 1915 are re-struck. A re-strike is an official reissuing of a coin which is no longer in production. The Austrian 1 Ducat is made of gold which is 0.987 pure (high purity) and its melt weight in gold is 0.1122 troy.
  So this virtually pure gold coin contains a little over 1/10 of an ounce of pure gold. It is about 0.777 or slightly more than ¾ of an inch in diameter so it makes a statement. To attain this size/purity ratio the Mint makes the Austrian 1 Ducat Gold Coin thin (about 0.0314 inches) and in so doing produces one of the great pure bullion products today.
  These beauties are large for their weight and the coin’s purity is instantly recognizable as real gold. The Austrian 1 Ducat Gold Coin offers other advantages:
1 - it is minted by a sovereign government so production, purity and weight are guaranteed allowing precious metal dealers worldwide to post daily buy and sell prices.
2 - The Austrian 1 Ducat Gold Coin enjoys a worldwide audience because premiums are low and it is a recognizable bullion coin having been traded for decades. Its smaller size also makes this pure coin a excellent barter choice.
3 - The re-strike Austrian 1 Ducat Gold Coin also offers a possible government foil. Because of its date (1915) this coin was a popular way of getting around the US prohibition on gold ownership prior to 1975 in the United States. For this reason some believe that if gold were confiscated in America the Austrian 1 Ducat Gold Coin might be exempt because of its dating. Whether you buy the argument or not it is nonetheless a reason for this coin’s continued popularity.
4 - There is no reporting requirement (Federal Form 1099B) when buying or selling the Austrian 1 Ducat Gold Coin and it fluctuates directly with the daily gold market.

Transylvania 2 Ducat Gold Coin 1765 Empress Maria Theresa

Transylvania 2 Ducat Gold Coin Empress Maria TheresaTransylvania 2 Ducat Gold Coin

Transylvania 2 Ducat Gold Coin 1765 Empress Maria Theresa

Obverse: outer pearl circle, Diademed bust of Empress Maria Theresa facing left and legend: M · THERESIA · D:G · R · IMP · GE · HU · BO · REG ·

Reverse: outer pearl circle, inside the double headed eagle holding the Crowned arms of Transylvania on its chest, value 2 and legend: TRAN · COTYR · 1765 · AR · AU · DUX · BU · ME · P

Composition: Gold.
Fineness: 0.986.
Weight: 7.0000 g.
AGW: 0.2219 oz.
Karlsburg Mint in Transylvania.

The legend starts on the obverse and ends on the reverse: M · THERESIA · D:G · R · IMP · GE · HU · BO · REG · TRAN · COTYR · 1765 · AR · AU · DUX · BU · ME · P , standing for

M[ARIA] THERESIA D[EI] G[RATIA] R[OMANORUM] IMP[ERATRIX] HU[NGARIAE] BO[HEMIAE] REG[INA]  TRAN[SYLVANIAE] CO[MES] TYR[OLIS] AR[CHIDUX] AU[STRIAE] DUX BU[RGVNDIAE] [ET] ME[DIOLANUM] P[RINCEPS]

and meaning Maria Theresa, by the grace of God empress of the Romans, queen of Hungary and Bohemia, archduchess of Austria, duchess of Burgundy and Milan, princess of Transylvania and countess of Tirol.
Medieval Transylvanian mintage knows a few main evolutionary periods: the period of the Hungarian kingdom that struck coin inside the Carpathian space (close to the gold mines, to say so), autonomous principality period (under Turkish suzerainity), Habsburg period up to Maria Theresa during which properly called Transylvanian coins kept on being struck (bearing the face of either the emperor or the empress, but also the coat of arms of the principality) and the last one that reminds of Transylvania only through mint ensigns on regular imperial coins.
The life of the autonomous Transylvanian principality under Habsburgs lasted from 1691 to 1867, when Austro-Hungarian dualism brought it to an end. The principality enjoyed a separate statute (endorsed by the Leopoldian Diploma), being direct subject of the emperor. Through the Carlowitz peace (1699) and the one of Passarowitz (1718) the Porte was compelled to acknowledge Austrian domination in Transylvania.



Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1984 Ballerina Fanny Elssler

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1984 Ballerina Fanny Elssler as FlorindaAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1984 Ballerina Fanny Elssler
Commemorative issue: Centennial - Death of Fanny Elssler

Obverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Obverse Designer: Edwin Grienauer.

Reverse: Full-length view of Fanny Elssler (Fanny Elssler as Florinda in the dance La Cachucha from the 1836 Coralli / Gide ballet Le Diable boiteux. Paris, 1836), 1810-1884, in inner circle.
Reverse Designer: Fritz Tiefenthaler.
Lettering: · 500 SCHILLING · REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH.

Composition: Silver (.925).
Weight: 24 g.
ASW: 0.7137 oz.
Diameter: 38 mm.



Fanny Elssler
Fanny Elssler (German: Fanny Elßler; 23 June 1810, Gumpendorf – 27 November 1884, Vienna), born Franziska Elßler, was an Austrian ballerina of the Romantic Period.
  Daughter of Johann Florian Elssler, a second generation employee of Nikolaus I, Prince Esterházy. Both Johann and his brother Josef were employed as copyists to the Prince's Kapellmeister, Joseph Haydn. Johann was to eventually become valet to Haydn and attended Haydn up to and was present at Haydn's death.
  From her earliest years she was trained for the ballet, and made her appearance at the Kärntnertortheater in Vienna before she was 7. She almost invariably danced with her sister Therese, who was 2 years her senior; the sisters studied dancing with Jean-Pierre Aumer and Friedrich Horschelt beginning when Fanny was 9 years old, also traveling to Naples to study with Gaetano Gioja. After some years' experience together in Vienna, the sisters went in 1827 to Naples. While there, she had an affair with Leopold, Prince of Salerno, the son of King Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies, which resulted in the birth of a son, Franz.
  Their success in Naples, to which Fanny contributed more largely than her sister, led to an engagement in Berlin in 1830. This was the beginning of a series of triumphs for Fanny's personal beauty and skill in dancing. After captivating all hearts in Berlin and Vienna, and inspiring the aged statesman Friedrich von Gentz with a remarkable passion, she paid a visit to London, where she received much kindness at the hands of Mr. and Mrs. Grote, who practically adopted the little girl who was born three months after the mother's arrival in England.
  In September 1834 Elssler appeared with the Ballet du Théâtre de l'Académie Royale de Musique (today known as the Paris Opera Ballet), a step to which she looked forward with much misgiving on account of Marie Taglioni's supremacy on that stage. However, Elssler and Taglioni were exceptionally different dancers. Taglioni was known as a danseur ballonné, represented by the lightness of her leaps and jumps. Elssler, on the other hand, distinguished her dancing with the precision in which she performed small, quick steps. Elssler's type of dancing was known as danse tacquetée. The results of her performances, however, were another triumph for Elssler, and the temporary eclipse of Taglioni. Taglioni, although the finer artist of the two, could not for the moment compete with the newcomer's personal fascination. It was conspicuous in her performance of the Spanish La Cachucha (from the 1836 Coralli/Gide ballet Le Diable boiteux[fr]) that Elssler outshone all rivals. Elssler was not Spanish, but her performances of Cachucha were filled with fire and sensual life. The poet Théophile Gautier titled her the "pagan" dancer because of her performances in Cachucha. Her image was often identified with pink satin and black lace as the fleshy, sensuous Spanish dancer. Elssler did not only possess technical gifts, her ability to perform dramatically was exceptional. Her performances of the great Romantic ballets portrayed heightened aspects of their former characters. This earned Elssler a place among the most talented and notable ballerinas of the Romantic ballet period.
  In 1840 she sailed with her sister for New York for a tour arranged by Henry Wikoff, and after two years of unmixed success they returned to Europe. While in New York City, Fanny dined with and was escorted by John Van Buren, son of the President of the United States, Martin Van Buren. During the following five years Fanny appeared in Germany, Austria, France, England, and Russia. In 1845, she refused to perform along with her rivals Marie Taglioni, Carlotta Grisi, Fanny Cerrito, and Lucile Grahn in Jules Perrot's Pas de Quatre in London. In the same year, having amassed a fortune, she retired from the stage and settled near Hamburg. A few years later her sister Theresa contracted a morganatic marriage with Prince Adalbert of Prussia, and was ennobled under the title of Baroness von Barnim. Elssler died in Vienna on 27 November 1884. Theresa was left a widow in 1873, and died on 19 November 1878.

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1980 Empress Maria Theresa

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1980 Empress Maria TheresaAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1980 Empress Maria Theresa
Commemorative issue: Bicentennial - Death of Maria Theresia

Obverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Lettering: 200 TODESTAG MARIA THERESIAS 1980 BODLAK
Obverse Designer: Kurt Bodlak

Reverse: Bust of Maria Theresa, Holy Roman Empress right, date at right
Lettering: · 500 SCHILLING · REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH.
Reverse Designer: Edwin Grienauer

Composition: Silver.
Fineness: 0.640.
Weight: 24 g.
ASW: 0.4938 oz.
Diameter: 38 mm.
Number produced: 842.000.



Empress Maria Theresa of Austria
Maria Theresa Walburga Amalia Christina (German: Maria Theresia; 13 May 1717 – 29 November 1780) was the only female ruler of the Habsburg dominions and the last of the House of Habsburg. She was the sovereign of Austria, Hungary, Croatia, Bohemia, Mantua, Milan, Lodomeria and Galicia, the Austrian Netherlands and Parma. By marriage, she was Duchess of Lorraine, Grand Duchess of Tuscany and Holy Roman Empress.
  She started her 40-year reign when her father, Emperor Charles VI, died in October 1740. Charles VI paved the way for her accession with the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713 and spent his entire reign securing it. Upon the death of her father, Saxony, Prussia, Bavaria, and France all repudiated the sanction they had recognised during his lifetime. Prussia proceeded to invade the affluent Habsburg province of Silesia, sparking a nine-year conflict known as the War of the Austrian Succession, and subsequently conquered it. Maria Theresa would later unsuccessfully try to reconquer Silesia during the Seven Years' War.
  Maria Theresa and her husband, Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor, had sixteen children, including the Queen of France, the Queen of Naples and Sicily, the Duchess of Parma and two Holy Roman Emperors, Joseph II and Leopold II. Though she was expected to cede power to Francis and Joseph, both of whom were officially her co-rulers in Austria and Bohemia, Maria Theresa was the absolute sovereign who ruled by the counsel of her advisers. She criticised and disapproved of many of Joseph's actions. Although she is considered to have been intellectually inferior to both Joseph and Leopold, Maria Theresa understood the importance of her public persona and was able to simultaneously evoke both esteem and affection from her subjects.
  Maria Theresa promulgated financial and educational reforms, with the assistance of Count Friedrich Wilhelm von Haugwitz and Gerard van Swieten, promoted commerce and the development of agriculture, and reorganised Austria's ramshackle military, all of which strengthened Austria's international standing. However, she refused to allow religious toleration and contemporaneous travellers thought her regime was bigoted and superstitious. As a young monarch who fought two dynastic wars, she believed that her cause should be the cause of her subjects, but in her later years she would believe that their cause must be hers.

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1987 Wolf Dietrich Raitenau

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1987 Wolf Dietrich RaitenauAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1987 Wolf Dietrich Raitenau
Commemorative issue: 400th Anniversary - Birth of Salzburg's Archbishop Wolf Dietrich Raitenau

Obverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Obverse Designer: Edwin Grienauer.
Lettering: · 500 SCHILLING · REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH.

Reverse: Bust of Archbishop von Raitenau, 3/4 left, two dates at left.
Reverse Designer: Josef Fösleitner.


Composition: Silver (.925).
ASW: 0.7137 oz.
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 37 mm.



Wolf Dietrich von Raitenau
Wolf Dietrich von Raitenau (26 March 1559 – 16 January 1617) was Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg from 1587 to 1612.
  Raitenau was born at Hofen Castle in Lochau near Bregenz in Further Austria, the son of the Habsburg colonel Hans Werner von Raitenau and Helene von Hohenems, a niece of Pope Pius IV and sister of Mark Sittich von Hohenems Altemps, who was consecrated Bishop of Constance in 1561, as well as sister-in-law of Cardinal Charles Borromeo.
  Wolf Dietrich received an ecclesiastical education at the Collegium Germanicum in Rome and became a member of the Salzburg cathedral chapter in 1578. His predecessor Archbishop George of Kuenburg had long time served as a coadjutor bishop and had found himself in constant conflict with the chapter. Upon his death in 1587, Raitenau was elected as a compromise candidate and was ordained by the Passau bishop Urban of Trennbach. He continued the harsh measures of the Counter-Reformation initiated by his predecessors, invited Franciscan and Augustinian friars, and in 1589 had all Protestants expelled from the city of Salzburg. In his later years however, he developed a milder attitude and initiated reforms of the liturgy and the administration of the episcopal lands, which however alienated the Roman Curia.
  Perceptive, well-read, and a follower of Niccolò Machiavelli's ideas, Raitenau considered himself a genuine Renaissance prince of an absolutist state. He won fame not only an art collector but also as a builder, who significantly promoted the spread of the Baroque architecture north of the Alps: When Salzburg Cathedral was devastated by a fire on the night of December 11, 1598, had plans set up for a lavish reconstruction by the Venetian architect Vincenzo Scamozzi, who also drew up a master plan for the adjacent Residenzplatz square and designed the Salzburg Residenz. The new cathedral was however erected under Raitenau's successor Mark Sittich von Hohenems and his architect Santino Solari. In 1606 the archbishop had also a castle built for his mistress, Salome Alt, mother of fifteen children, which later was converted into Mirabell Palace
  Raitenau's rule was brought down after he had entered into a fierce dispute with his mighty neighbour Duke Maximilian I of Bavaria: In 1609 the Archbishop refused to join Maximilian's Catholic League and in October 1611 his forces invaded the Berchtesgaden Provostry, which was also claimed by the Bavarian House of Wittelsbach. In the subsequent clashes of arms, Bavarian troops campaigned Salzburg. Deserted by his cathedral chapter and abandoned by Emperor Rudolf II, Raitenau on his flight to Carinthia was captured, deposed and imprisoned for life by his nephew and successor Mark Sittich von Hohenems, first at Hohenwerfen Castle, later in Hohensalzburg.

Austrian Coins 20 Schilling 1986 800th anniversary of the Georgenberg Pact

Austrian Coins 20 Schilling 1986 Georgenberg PactAustrian Coins 20 Schilling

Austrian Coins 20 Schilling 1986 800th anniversary of the Georgenberg Pact
Commemorative issue: Steiermark - 800 Years of Georgenberger Handfeste

Obverse: Two figures of Duke of Styria Otokar IV and Duke of Austria Leopold V holding the text of the treaty; between their heads two shields with Coats of Arms of Styria and Austria; along the top edge: 1186-1986; along the bottom edge: GEORGENBERGER HANDFESTE (Georgenberg Treaty).
Lettering: 1186 - 1986 TP GEORGENBERGER HANDFESTE.
Designer: Kurt Bodlak, Thomas Pesendorfer (concave initials TP on a textile behind Duke of Austria on the reverse)
Engraver: Kurt Bodlak.

Reverse: in the coin centre inside a square with rounded corners in two lines face value: 20 / SCHILLING; below year of issue divided by a shield in colours of Austrian flag; along the top edge: REPUBLIK ÖSTERREICH (Republic of Austria).
Lettering: REPUBLIK ÖSTERREICH 20 SCHILLING 1986.
Engraver: Josef Kaiser.

Years: 1986-1993.
Metal: Aluminium-nickel-bronze.
Weight: 8 g.
Diameter: 27.8 mm.
Thickness: 1.8 mm.
Shape: Round.
Mint: Münze Österreich (Austrian Mint), Vienna.

Mintage:
1986 801 000
1991 100 000
1992 100 000
1993 180 000



Georgenberg Pact
The Georgenberg Pact (German: Georgenberger Handfeste) was signed on 17 August 1186 on the Georgenberg mountain above Enns. Also called the Georgenberg Compact, it has been called by English-speaking historians a "Styrian Magna Carta", for it sought to guarantee the rights of the Styrian ministeriales in anticipation of the Babenberg acquisition. It consisted of two parts. The first part was an agreement between Duke Ottokar IV of Styria (from the Otakars dynasty) and Duke Leopold V of Austria (from the Babenberg dynasty). The childless and deathly ill Ottokar, who had contracted leprosy while on the Third Crusade, was to give his duchy to Leopold and to his son Frederick under the stipulation that Austria and Styria would henceforth remain undivided. The second part consists of a delineation of rights of the Styrian estates.
  The territory of Styria at the time went far beyond the modern Styrian state and included lands not only in modern Slovenia, but also in Upper Austria, more precisely the Traungau (the area around Wels and Steyr).
  The case of succession came to pass in 1192. With the exception of an interlude between 1194 and 1196, Styria has since then remained connected to Austria. The Georgenberg Pact thus was the first step towards the creation of the complex of lands of Austria, which was continued under the Habsburgs during the Late Middle Ages. The Pact was confirmed in 1237 by the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II.

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1984 Commercial Shipping on Lake Constance

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1984 Commercial Shipping on Lake ConstanceAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1984 Commercial Shipping on Lake Constance
Commemorative issue: 100th Anniversary - Commercial Shipping on Lake Constance

Obverse: Value within circle of shields.
Obverse Design: Edwin Grienauer.

Reverse: Commercial ship on water, within 3/4 circle, date below, left of small shield.
Reverse Design: Kurt Bodlak.

Metal: Silver (.925).
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 38 mm.



Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1985 Canonization of Leopold III, Margrave of Austria

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1985 Leopold III, Margrave of AustriaAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1985 Canonization of Leopold III, Margrave of Austria
Commemorative issue: 500th Anniversary - Canonization of Leopold III, Margrave of Austria

Obverse: Crowned standing figure of Leopold III, facing, holding model of church in left hand, divides dates.
Lettering: 500 JAHR-FEIER DER HEILIGSPRECHUNG DES MARKGRAFEN LEOPOLD III 1485 1985.
Engraver: Christa Reiter.

Reverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Lettering: REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH · 500 SCHILLING.
Engraver: Edwin Grienauer.

Metal: Silver (.925).
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 37 mm.



Leopold III, Margrave of Austria
Saint Leopold III (German: Luitpold, 1073 – 15 November 1136), known as Leopold the Good, was the Margrave of Austria from 1095 to his death in 1136. He was a member of the House of Babenberg. He was canonized on 6 January 1485 and became the patron saint of Austria, Lower Austria, Upper Austria, and Vienna. His feast day is 15 November.
  Leopold was born at Babenberg castle in Gars am Kamp, the son of Margrave Leopold II and Ida of Formbach-Ratelnberg. The Babenbergs cames to Austria from Bavaria where the family had risen to prominence in the 10th Century.
  In 1096 Leopold succeeded his father as margrave of Austria at the age of 23. He married twice. His first wife may have been one of the von Perg family, who died in 1105. The following year he married Agnes, the widowed sister of Emperor Henry V whom he had supported against her father Henry IV. This connection to the Salians raised the importance of the House of Babenberg, to which important royal rights over the margravate of Austria were granted. Also, Agnes had influential connections through her previous marriage to Frederick of Hohenstaufen, one of her sons being Conrad III of Germany.
  Leopold called himself "Princeps Terræ", a reflection of his sense of territorial independence. He was considered a candidate in the election of the Kaiser of the Holy Roman Empire in 1125, but declined this honour.
  He is mainly remembered for the development of the country and, in particular, the founding of several monasteries. His most important foundation is Klosterneuburg (1108). According to legend, the Virgin Mary appeared to him and led him to a place where he found the veil of his wife Agnes, who had lost it years earlier. He established the Klosterneuburg Monastery there. He subsequently expanded the settlement to become his residence.
  Leopold also founded the monasteries of Heiligenkreuz, Kleinmariazell and Seitenstetten which developed a territory still largely covered by forest. All of these induced the church to canonize him in 1485.
  Leopold also fostered the development of cities, such as Klosterneuburg, Vienna and Krems. The last one was granted the right to mint but never attained great importance.
  The writings of Henry of Melk and Ava of Göttweig, which are the first literary texts from Austria, date back to Leopold's time.
  He is buried in the Klosterneuburg Monastery, which he founded. His skull is kept in an embroidered reliquary, which leaves the forehead exposed; it also wears an archducal crown.
  In 1663, under the rule of his namesake Emperor Leopold I, he was declared patron saint of Austria instead of Saint Koloman.
  The brothers Joseph and Michael Haydn, each of whom sang in the choir of St. Stephen's Cathedral, both sang in that capacity at Klosterneuburg on this day. Joseph Haydn later became the more famous composer of the two. Michael Haydn later (1805) wrote a Mass in honour of Leopold, the Missa sub titulo Sancti Leopoldi.

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1984 Stift Stams in Tirol

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1984 Stift Stams in TirolAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1984 Stift Stams
Commemorative issue: 700th Anniversary - Stift Stams in Tirol

Obverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Lettering: · 700 JAHRE · STIFT STAMS TIROL 1984.
Obverse Design: Edwin Grienauer.

Reverse: Stift Stams in Tirol, small shield below.
Lettering: · REPUBLIK · 500 SCHILLING ÖSTERREICH.
Reverse Design: Alfred Zierler.

Metal: Silver (.925).
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 38 mm.

Stams
Stams is a municipality in Imst District, in the Austrian state of Tyrol. It is chiefly known for Cistercian Stams Abbey (Stift Stams), founded in 1273 by Count Meinhard II of Gorizia-Tyrol and his wife.



Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1993 Alpine Region

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1993 Alpine RegionAustrian Silver Coins 500 Schilling 1993 Alpine Region

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1993 Alpine Region

Obverse: Alpine Region, value at bottom.
Reverse: Two Alpine dancers.
Edge Description: Plain with engraved lettering.

Composition: Silver.
Fineness: 0.925.
Weight: 24 g.
ASW: 0.7137 oz.



Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1994 River Region

Austrian Silver Coins 500 Schilling 1994 River RegionAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1994 River Region

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1994 River Region
Austria & Her Folks

Obverse: River Region, value below, date at bottom.
Reverse: Folk paraders.
Edge Description: Plain with engraved lettering.

Composition: Silver.
Fineness: 0.925.
Weight: 24.0000 g.
ASW: 0.7137 oz.
Diameter: 37 mm.



Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1994 Pannonian Region

Austrian Silver Coins 500 Schilling 1994 Pannonian RegionAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1994 Pannonian Region

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1994 Pannonian Region

Obverse: Pannonian Region, value below.
Reverse: Dancers.
Edge Description: Plain with engraved lettering.

Composition: Silver.
Fineness: 0.925.
Weight: 24.0000 g.
ASW: 0.7137 oz.
Diameter: 37 mm.



Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1986 Prince Eugene of Savoy

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1986 Prince Eugene of SavoyAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1986 Prince Eugene of Savoy
Commemorative issue: 250th Anniversary - Birth of Prince Eugene of Savoy

Obverse: Man on rearing horse (Prince Eugene of Savoy during the Austro-Turkish War by Jacob van Schuppen), three dates at bottom.
Lettering: PRINZ EUGEN v.SAVOYEN 1663 1985 1736.
Engraver: Thomas Pesendorfer.

Reverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Lettering: REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH · 500 SCHILLING.
Engraver: Edwin Grienauer.
Edge: Plain with engraved lettering.

Composition: Silver (.925).
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 37 mm.
Shape: Round.



Prince Eugene of Savoy
Prince Eugene of Savoy (French: François-Eugène de Savoie, Italian: Principe Eugenio di Savoia-Carignano, German: Prinz Eugen von Savoyen; 18 October 1663 – 21 April 1736) was a general of the Imperial Army and statesman of the Holy Roman Empire and the Archduchy of Austria and one of the most successful military commanders in modern European history, rising to the highest offices of state at the Imperial court in Vienna. Born in Paris, Eugene grew up around the French court of King Louis XIV. Based on his poor physique and bearing, the Prince was initially prepared for a career in the church, but by the age of 19 he had determined on a military career. Rejected by Louis XIV for service in the French army, Eugene moved to Austria and transferred his loyalty to the Habsburg Monarchy.
  Spanning six decades, Eugene served three Holy Roman Emperors: Leopold I, Joseph I, and Charles VI. He first saw action against the Ottoman Turks at the Siege of Vienna in 1683 and the subsequent War of the Holy League, before serving in the Nine Years' War, fighting alongside his cousin, the Duke of Savoy. However, the Prince's fame was secured with his decisive victory against the Ottomans at the Battle of Zenta in 1697, earning him Europe-wide fame. Eugene enhanced his standing during the War of the Spanish Succession, where his partnership with the Duke of Marlborough secured victories against the French on the fields of Blenheim (1704), Oudenarde (1708), and Malplaquet (1709); he gained further success in the war as Imperial commander in northern Italy, most notably at the Battle of Turin (1706). Renewed hostilities against the Ottomans in the Austro-Turkish War consolidated his reputation, with victories at the battles of Petrovaradin (1716), and the decisive encounter at Belgrade (1717).
  Throughout the late 1720s, Eugene's influence and skilful diplomacy managed to secure the Emperor powerful allies in his dynastic struggles with the Bourbon powers, but physically and mentally fragile in his later years, Eugene enjoyed less success as commander-in-chief of the army during his final conflict, the War of the Polish Succession. Nevertheless, in Austria, Eugene's reputation remains unrivalled. Although opinions differ as to his character, there is no dispute over his great achievements: he helped to save the Habsburg Empire from French conquest; he broke the westward thrust of the Ottomans, liberating central Europe after a century and a half of Turkish occupation; and he was one of the great patrons of the arts whose building legacy can still be seen in Vienna today. Eugene died in his sleep at his home on 21 April 1736, aged 72.

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1981 Verdun Altar

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1981 Verdun AltarAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1981 Verdun Altar
Commemorative issue: 800th Anniversary - Verdun Altar in Klosterneuburg

Obverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Obverse Design: Edwin Grienauer.
Lettering: · 500 SCHILLING · REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH.

Reverse: Samson fighting the lion - Detail of the Verduner altarpiece in Klosterneuburg, Austria by Nicholas of Verdun.
Reverse Design: Kurt Bodlak.

Composition: Silver (.640).
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 38 mm.
Shape: Round.



Verdun Altar
The Verdun Altar is located at the Klosterneuburg Monastery in Austria.
The chapel of St Leopold (Klosterneuburg Monastery) contains the Verdun Altar made in 1181 by Nicholas of Verdun. Its three parts comprise 45 gilded copper plates modeled on Byzantine paragons, similar to the Shrine of the Three Kings at Cologne Cathedral. Originally manufactured as panels, they were assembled as an altar in secondary utilization circa 1330.
  The tripartite concept is reflected in the arrangement of the plates. According to the biblical exegesis, the depictions are split into three rows of the eras of Adam and Noah, of Abraham, David and the Babylonian captivity and finally of Jesus' life, placed in the central part. The columns of adjacent plates of different ages symbolise their connection according to the ideas of the typology theory. The arrangement may refer to the mystic doctrines of the medieval theologian Hugh of Saint Victor. American scholar Elfie Raymond, professor of philosophy and hermeneutics at Sarah Lawrence College of New York produced an online catalog of the typology of virtues found in the theological program.

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1980 Austrian State Treaty

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1980 Austrian State TreatyAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1980 Austrian State Treaty
Commemorative issue: 25th Anniversary of the State Treaty

Obverse: Belvedere Castle, two dates below.
Lettering: 25 JAHRE 1956 - 1980 STAATSVERTRAG.
Engraver: A.Zemann.

Reverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Lettering: · 500 SCHILLING · REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH.
Engraver: Edwin Grienauer.

Composition: Silver (.640).
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 38 mm.
Shape: Round.



Austrian State Treaty
The Austrian State Treaty or Austrian Independence Treaty re-established Austria as a sovereign state. It was signed on May 15, 1955, in Vienna at the Schloss Belvedere among the Allied occupying powers (France, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the Soviet Union) and the Austrian government. It officially came into force on July 27, 1955.
  Its full title is "Treaty for the re-establishment of an independent and democratic Austria, signed in Vienna on the 15 May 1955" (German: Staatsvertrag betreffend die Wiederherstellung eines unabhängigen und demokratischen Österreich, unterzeichnet in Wien am 15. Mai).

Belvedere, Vienna
The Belvedere is a historic building complex in Vienna, Austria, consisting of two Baroque palaces (the Upper and Lower Belvedere), the Orangery, and the Palace Stables. The buildings are set in a Baroque park landscape in the third district of the city, on the south-eastern edge of its centre. It houses the Belvedere museum. The grounds are set on a gentle gradient and include decorative tiered fountains and cascades, Baroque sculptures, and majestic wrought iron gates. The Baroque palace complex was built as a summer residence for Prince Eugene of Savoy.
  The Belvedere was built during a period of extensive construction in Vienna, which at the time was both the imperial capital and home to the ruling Habsburg dynasty. This period of prosperity followed on from the commander-in-chief Prince Eugene of Savoy's successful conclusion of a series of wars against the Ottoman Empire.

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1986 St. Florian Monastery

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1986 St. Florian MonasteryAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1986 St. Florian Monastery
Commemorative issue: 300th Anniversary of St. Florian's Monastery

Obverse: St. Florian's Abbey, two dates below, small shield lower left.
Lettering: 300 JAHRE BAROCKSTIFT ST.FLORIAN 1686 1986.
Engraver: Kurt Bodlak.

Reverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Lettering: · 500 SCHILLING · REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH.
Engraver: Edwin Grienauer.

Composition: Silver (.925).
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 37 mm.
Shape: Round.



St. Florian Monastery
St. Florian Monastery (German: Stift Sankt Florian) is an Augustinian monastery in the town of Sankt Florian, Austria. Founded in the early ninth century, and later refounded by Augustinians in the eleventh century, St. Florian is the largest monastery in Upper Austria, and rivals Melk Abbey and Klosterneuburg Monastery as among the most impressive examples of Baroque architecture in Austria. The monastery is dedicated to Saint Florian, whose fourth century grave lies beneath the monastery.
  The monastery, named after Saint Florian, was founded in the Carolingian period. From 1071 it has housed a community of Augustinian Canons, and is thus is one of the oldest operational monasteries in the world following the Rule of St. Augustine.
  Between 1686 and 1708 the monastery complex was reconstructed in Baroque style by Carlo Antonio Carlone, of whom St. Florian's is reckoned the masterpiece. After his death the work was continued by Jakob Prandtauer. The result is the biggest Baroque monastery in Upper Austria. The frescoes were created by Bartolomeo Altomonte.
  Construction of the library wing was not begun until 1744, by Johann Gotthard Hayberger. The library comprises about 130,000 items, including many manuscripts. The gallery contains numerous works of the 16th and 17th centuries, but also some late medieval works of the Danube School, particularly by Albrecht Altdorfer.
  In 1827 a Polish librarian, Father Josef Chmel, has found one of the oldest Polish literary artifacts, the Sankt Florian Psalter, in the monastery. The Psalter's name, Sankt Florian Psalter, comes from the place of this rediscovery.
  In January 1941 the premises were taken over by the Gestapo and the monks were expelled. From 1942 the Reichsrundfunkgesellschaft ("Radio Society of the Third Reich") was based here under its general director Heinrich Glasmeier.

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1987 Austrian Railways

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1987 Austrian RailwaysAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1987 Austrian Railways
Commemorative issue: 150th Anniversary of Austrian Railways

Obverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Lettering: · 500 SCHILLING · REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH.

Reverse: Railway locomotive "Austria" introduced in 1837 (Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway) and modern electric locomotive, two dates to lower right.
Lettering: 150 JAHRE EISENBAHN ZIERLER in ÖSTERREICH 1837-1987.

Metal: Silver (.925).
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 38 mm.
Shape: Round.



Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1983 World Cup Horse Jumping Championship

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1983 World Cup Horse Jumping ChampionshipAustria 500 Schilling Silver Coin

Austria 500 Schilling Silver Coin 1983 World Cup Horse Jumping Championship
Commemorative issue: World Cup Horse Jumping Championship

Obverse: Face value within a circle of the nine shields of the federal provinces of Austria, Coat of arms of Austria above the face value.
Obverse Design: Edwin Grienauer.
Lettering: · 500 SCHILLING · REPUBLIK · ÖSTERREICH.

Reverse: Horse Jumper.
Reverse Design: Thomas Pesendorfer.

Composition: Silver (.925).
Weight: 24 g.
Diameter: 37 mm.
Shape: Round.