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fmd_503433 - Médaille satirique Lt 27, type E “Chouette penchée” 1870 Schw.E1a bélière

Médaille satirique Lt 27, type E “Chouette penchée” 1870  Schw.E1a bélière AU
Not available.
Item sold on our e-shop (2018)
Price : 150.00 €
Type : Médaille satirique Lt 27, type E “Chouette penchée”
Date: 1870
Quantity minted : ---
Metal : brass
Diameter : 27 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Weight : 8,06 g.
Edge : lisse
Rarity : R1
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : * NAPOLEON III LE - MISERABLE * / 80 000 PRISONNIERS.
Obverse description : Buste de Napoléon III à gauche coiffé d'un casque à pointe allemand, "SEDAN" inscrit sur le col.

Reverse


Reverse legend : * VAMPIRE FRANÇAIS */ 2 DÉCE. 1851 - 2 SEPT. 1870.
Reverse description : Aigle napoléonien surmonté d'une tête de chouette sur un fût de canon.

Commentary


Frappe médaille. Exemplaire sans la chaîne au collier, sans cigarette mais avec une bélière (plus rare). Sur cet exemplaire, on constate que la “chouette” du revers est légèrement penché vers la droite, comme sur l’exemplaire vendu dans MONNAIES XVIII, lot n°2217 ; belle cassure de coin au droit.
Répertorié en tant que E1a (avec bélière) dans l’ouvrage de Christian Schweyer “Histoire des Monnaies Satiriques” p.362-365.

Historical background


SATIRICAL COINS - 1870 WAR AND BATTLE OF SEDAN

During the war of 1870, the army of Châlons commanded by Mac-Mahon counted from August 15 the presence of Napoleon III and tried to come to the aid of Bazaine locked up in Metz with the army of the Rhine. On August 21, the army of Châlons leaves to join Mac-Mahon but this one is surrounded. Beaten several times, notably at Beaumont, the army was rejected and then surrounded at Sedan by the Prussian Generalissimo Moltke, despite the efforts of Commander Lambert who, wounded, fought with his porpoises until the last cartridge. On September 2, 1870, crushed by German artillery fire, Napoleon III and 83,000 soldiers of the French army surrendered to the King of Prussia. On September 3, Napoleon III and William I meet while Paris learns of the Emperor's defeat and captivity. Demonstrations burst out with cries of "forfeiture! forfeiture!". On September 4, Napoleon III is ousted while a government of national defense is set up.

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