Palau has operated one of the more prolific commemorative programs in the Pacific, issuing silver pieces under foreign minting contracts — primarily through the Austrian Mint and B.H. Mayer — targeting European collector markets with virtually no connection to the island nation itself. The Reichstag piece fits squarely into that model: a coin sold largely to German collectors, issued by a country whose government had no direct role in its design or distribution.
The building depicted was gutted by fire in February 1933, an event the Nazi government exploited within hours to push through emergency powers that suspended civil liberties. Restoration wasn't completed until 1999, when the Bundestag returned to it as Germany's parliamentary seat.
Palau has operated one of the more prolific commemorative programs in the Pacific, issuing silver pieces under foreign minting contracts — primarily through the Austrian Mint and B.H. Mayer — targeting European collector markets with virtually no connection to the island nation itself. The Reichstag piece fits squarely into that model: a coin sold largely to German collectors, issued by a country whose government had no direct role in its design or distribution.
The building depicted was gutted by fire in February 1933, an event the Nazi government exploited within hours to push through emergency powers that suspended civil liberties. Restoration wasn't completed until 1999, when the Bundestag returned to it as Germany's parliamentary seat.