Description

Designer: Alexander Hutter
Engraver: Jean-Jacques Barre

Obverse

A hat with three feathers on top of the Swiss escutcheon on a crown of oak and olive is surrounded with the state name in Latin.

The white cross has been used as the field sign (attached to the clothing of combattants and to the cantonal war flags in the form of strips of linen) of the Old Swiss Confederacy since its formation in the late 13th or early 14th century. Its symbolism was described by the Swiss Federal Council in 1889 as representing "at the same the Christian cross symbol and the field sign of the Old Confederacy". The federal coat of arms was defined in 1815 for the Restored Confederacy as the white-on-red Swiss cross in a heraldic shield. The white cross is known as the Swiss cross. Its arms are equilateral, and their ratio of length to width is 7:6.

The name Helvetica is a derivation of the ethnonym Helvetii, the name of the Gaulish tribe inhabiting the Swiss Plateau prior to the Roman conquest.

HELVETIA
1912

Reverse

Numeral within wreath. Mintmark below the wreath.

The mintmark "B" stands for Bern Mint (Swissmint), "A" for Paris Mint.

2
B

Edge

2 Rappen

KM# 4 Schön# 16
Characteristics
Material Bronze
Weight 2.5 g
Diameter 20 mm
Thickness 0.98 mm
Shape round
Alignment Medal
Alt # KM# 4.1, KM# 4.2
Mints
Paris Mint (A)
Swissmint

Related coins

Zinc, 2.5 g, ⌀ 20 mm

Bronze, 3 g, ⌀ 20 mm