Prague Mint:
Medal themes range wide, include Warsaw Pact invasion, Titanic centennial, even Henry Ford.
By Jeff Starck
Coin World
By Jeff Starck , Coin World
Published: 08/19/14
The Prague Mint's headquarters are located in a historic area in the Czech capital.
Editor's note: The following is the third of a
three-part Coin World series about the Prague Mint prepared by Jeff
Starck for the September 2014 monthly edition of Coin World.
Read
the posts in the series:
-
Europe's youngest mint blends old and new in its medal production
-
Young, private Prague Mint honors coinage tradition while embracing modern themes, new technology
-
Prague Mint: Medal themes range wide, include Warsaw Pact invasion, Titanic centennial, even Henry Ford
While some mints use design software to crank out dozens of different coin issues every month, the private Prague Mint remains firmly entrenched in the old ways while making reasonable use of the new.
Today the Prague Mint produces a vast array of medals for direct sale, and other items as ordered by several customers. Though computers are used to create dies, the craftsmen and women at the Prague Mint abstain from the 3-D computer designing that has allowed other mints to issue coins at a machine-gun-fire pace. Instead, the mint’s artists use traditional methods in creating designs for medals.
A mint that acknowledges itself as the youngest in Europe, and almost certainly the youngest in the world, is firmly holding to the most traditional of methods for some aspects of medal design while embracing newer technologies for other tasks.
Medals from Prague
One of the Prague Mint’s latest
projects is a “thank you” medal to Czech Americans, according to
chief executive officer Pavel Trtik, and specifically, to a group of
transplants in Chicago.
Records from the 1910 U.S. Census
suggest that more than 500,000 people in America were expatriates of
Czech heritage, Trtik said. Chicago was the center of their U.S.
settlement, with some 110,000 there, making it the third-largest
concentration of Czechs after Prague and Vienna.
As an
aside, the Prague Mint points out that former Chicago Mayor Anton
(Tony) Cermak was Czech. Cermak was shot in Miami, Fla., during an
attempted assassination on President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt
Feb. 15, 1933, and is reported to have said, “I’m glad it was me and
not you, Mr. President” (though the reports of the statement are
unsubstantiated). Cermak died on March 6, not directly because of
the shooting, but due to pre-existing complications of ulcerative
colitis; his bullet wound had reportedly healed by the time of his
death.
Czech Americans were invaluable in assisting a
democratic Czechoslovakia in 1918, Trtik said, providing an
“astounding amount” of financial assistance as well as signing up to
join the American military during World War I.
Many are
buried in Chicago at a Czech National Cemetery, which holds “the
graves and tombs of our compatriots who fell mostly in France during
the period from July 1918 to the end of October 1918,” Trtik said.
An unnamed ship, representing those that carried passengers
between the two countries, appears on the obverse of the medal, and
the American eagle and Czech lion are part of the reverse design.
The medal is offered in gold, silver and antique silver
versions.
This is not the first American theme for a medal
from the Prague Mint.
In 2013, automobile industrialist Henry
Ford was honored upon the 150th anniversary of his birth. A bust of
Ford and his signature greet viewers on the obverse, and various
views of the Model T car appear on the reverse.
Another of
the Prague Mint’s medals marks a theme of global import. In 2012
Tereza Eisnerova’s design marked the centennial of the Titanic’s
sinking. Just 368 Proof examples and 74 Brilliant Uncirculated
pieces were issued.
Other topics of Prague Mint include
famous artists like Alphons Mucha and Gustav Klimt, authors Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle and William Shakespeare, among others.
The
majority of themes, however, are Czech in nature or have meanings
specific to residents of the former Czechoslovakia. One such medal
in 2014 honors the anniversary of the local bishopric being elevated
to an archbishopric, not likely a big seller outside of the Czech
Republic.
Political medals and coins marking some of Eastern
Europe’s grimmest and happiest days are popular, so it is no
surprise to see a medal marking the 1968 Warsaw Pact invasion of
Czechoslovakia, as Soviets and allies sought to halt the
liberalization of the Prague Spring.
The poignant medal, issued in 2013 for the invasion’s 45th anniversary, shows a tank’s gun jutting toward the viewer of the medal on the obverse, while tank tracks stretch across the Czech lion on the reverse.
Another medal, also issued in 2013, honors the Velvet Revolution of Nov. 17, 1989.
The obverse displays the V for victory or peace symbol created by
two upraised fingers of a protestor, while the Czech lion is
surrounded by barbed wire on the reverse.
In a few years’
time, the Prague Mint has issued hundreds of medals of different
themes for collectors around the world, with various sizes and
finishes providing options for collectors of all budgets. For
example, an unlimited copper version of the Warsaw Pact medal is
available for 199 koruna, or about $9.67 U.S., while a 1-ounce gold
medal marking the minting history of Prague costs 44,475 koruna
(about $2,159 U.S.).
Full details of the Prague Mint’s
operations and medals may
be found online.
According to the website, “As a country
at the heart of Europe, pervaded with thousands of years of history
of many famous empires, the country, where from everlasting various
cultures were meeting and blending, we do have something to say.”
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