Obverse. Photo © NumisCorner.com
  • 2 Øre 1948-1972, KM# 840, Denmark, Frederick IX
  • 2 Øre 1948-1972, KM# 840, Denmark, Frederick IX
Obverse

Crowned monogram of Frederick IX of Denmark (1899-1972) divides date.

The sovereign's crown is the most important Royal and State symbol and represents national sovereignty. Since 1671 the crown of Christian V, which is kept at Rosenborg Palace, has been the Royal Danish crown. The crown of King Christian V of Denmark was the crown used at the coronation of all of Denmark's absolutist kings. While the reign of such monarchs ended in 1840, the crown is still used during a Danish king's castrum doloris, the last time in 1972. Used by the kings from Christian V to Christian VIII. Made by Paul Kurtz in Copenhagen, 1670–1671. Gold with enamel and table-cut stones. Total weight 2080 g. Also 2 garnets and 2 sapphires, of which the largest dates back to Frederick I of Denmark.

19 66
FR
IX

Reverse

Country name, denomination, mintmark and initials (N♥S or C♥S or S♥S).

The heart (♥) is the Royal Danish Mint mark. 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 mint officials' initials:
N: Niels Peter Nielsen (1927-1955)
C: Alfred Kristian Frederik Christiansen (1956-1971)
S: (Vagn Sorensen, 1971-1978)

Moneyer's initials:
S: Harald Salomon (1933-1968)

2
ØRE
C♥ DANMARK S

Edge

2 Øre

KM# 840
Characteristics
Material Zinc
Weight 3.2 g
Diameter 20.8 mm
Thickness 1.66 mm
Shape round
Alignment Medal
Alt # KM# 840.1, KM# 840.2, KM# 840.3
Mint
Royal Danish Mint

Related coins

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Cupronickel, 3 g, ⌀ 18 mm

Cupronickel, 4.23 g, ⌀ 22.97 mm