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Item sold on our e-shop (2021)
Price : 25.00 €
Item sold on our e-shop (2021)
Price : 25.00 €
Type : Belle épreuve 10 Euro LE DISQUE DE NEBRA
Date: 2008
Mint name / Town : Berlin A
Quantity minted : 228.600
Metal : silver
Millesimal fineness : 925 ‰
Diameter : 32,50 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Weight : 18,00 g.
Edge : inscription "DER GESCHMIEDETE HIMMEL IM HERZEN EUROPAS"
Coments on the condition:
Quelques tâches grises et micro-rayures
Catalogue references :
Obverse
Obverse description : Représentation du disque de Nebra.
Reverse
Commentary
10 Euro commémorative dont le thème est le Disque de Nebra. Ce disque en bronze de 32 cm de diamètre et de 30 kilos a été découvert lors de fouilles illégales en 1999 sur le site de Nebra-sur-Unstrut (Saxe-Anhalt ). Selon de nombreux archéologues et scientifiques le disque céleste de Nebra daterait de 1600 avant notre ère et serait la plus ancienne représentation connue de la voûte céleste. Il est conservé au Musée régional de la Préhistoire à Halle. Sur une plaque circulaire sont incrustés des motifs en feuille d’or (la lune représentée en disque central ou en croissant, trente-deux étoiles, parmi lesquelles la Pléiade).
10 Euro commemorative coin with the theme of the Nebra Disc. This bronze disc, 32 cm in diameter and weighing 30 kilos, was discovered during illegal excavations in 1999 at the site of Nebra-sur-Unstrut (Saxony-Anhalt). According to many archaeologists and scientists, the Nebra celestial disc dates back to 1600 BC and is the oldest known representation of the celestial vault. It is kept at the Regional Museum of Prehistory in Halle. A circular plaque is inlaid with gold leaf motifs (the moon represented as a central disc or crescent, thirty-two stars, including the Pleiades).
10 Euro commemorative coin with the theme of the Nebra Disc. This bronze disc, 32 cm in diameter and weighing 30 kilos, was discovered during illegal excavations in 1999 at the site of Nebra-sur-Unstrut (Saxony-Anhalt). According to many archaeologists and scientists, the Nebra celestial disc dates back to 1600 BC and is the oldest known representation of the celestial vault. It is kept at the Regional Museum of Prehistory in Halle. A circular plaque is inlaid with gold leaf motifs (the moon represented as a central disc or crescent, thirty-two stars, including the Pleiades).







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