Pattern coinage from the Weimar period occupies an awkward historiographical space — officially sanctioned trials that never achieved circulation status, often produced in tiny quantities for internal evaluation or ministerial presentation. The J.325 designation places this within Jaeger's German coin reference, where pattern listings are frequently incomplete in terms of surviving population data.
1926 was a politically turbulent year for the Republic, with debates over reparations obligations under the Dawes Plan still reshaping monetary policy. Whether this specific pattern was struck at Berlin, Munich, or another state facility remains a point of contention among specialists.
Pattern coinage from the Weimar period occupies an awkward historiographical space — officially sanctioned trials that never achieved circulation status, often produced in tiny quantities for internal evaluation or ministerial presentation. The J.325 designation places this within Jaeger's German coin reference, where pattern listings are frequently incomplete in terms of surviving population data.
1926 was a politically turbulent year for the Republic, with debates over reparations obligations under the Dawes Plan still reshaping monetary policy. Whether this specific pattern was struck at Berlin, Munich, or another state facility remains a point of contention among specialists.