Prague Mint:
Growing market for Czech medals keeps historically headquartered private mint busy
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 second 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.
Prague Mint revival
In 2011, about 18
months after the privatization of the Czech Mint, several former
Czech Mint employees formed the Prague Mint. Since then, the Prague
Mint has produced dozens of limited edition medals to meet a
burgeoning market for medals in the former Czechoslovakia.
A boom in Czech coin
and medal art has risen in the last few years, according to engraver
Tomas Lamac, cited in a book the Prague Mint published. (The book’s
title is the Prague Mint’s name, in Czech.)
Lamac said: “The
level is very high and it can be compared with the best production
in the world. The reason for this is because fortunately we have a
great many excellent artists, whether it is Vladimir Oppl, [the]
late Jiri Harcuba, whose work I like a lot, or other brilliant
artists. The high level of the Czech medal production rests on these
masters.”
Though Prague is a historic city, no buildings
remain today that housed minting facilities in the past.
The
Prague Mint’s headquarters, offices and a sales gallery are located
in the center of the capital city, in the Municipal House, a
valuable and beautiful Art Nouveau building more than 100 years old,
according to Zdenek Vojtech, commercial director at the Prague Mint.
The actual minting for the Prague Mint occurs at one of the firm’s
facilities elsewhere, not in Prague.
“For a private company
it is not possible to own this amazing building, therefore we have
been renting the space there,” he said.
The building is
right next to the Powder Tower, a historic gate that stands at the
entrance to the old city of Prague. The so-called “silver trail”
ended at the tower, which is known today for the time it served to
store gunpowder. At this gate, though, silver from silver mines was
delivered to the historic mint, according to the Prague Mint.
The choice of location is symbolic, since it was here in 1918
that the independence of democratic Czechoslovakia was proclaimed.
The building also stands on the exact spot where the Bohemian
king’s court used to be located, and the king had the exclusive
right to issue the currency for the kingdom, Vojtech said, “So this
place, historically, has much to do with minting.”
In
addition to its location in the Czech capital, the Prague Mint has
offices in Bratislava, the Slovak capital, a village named Prague in
Slovakia, and in Vsetin, a town in Moravia, where most of the mint’s
production facilities are housed in a former bank building the
Prague Mint bought on the main city square.
In person,
Vojtech lights up when talking about the mint’s products and
mission, which include development of the thousand-year tradition of
numismatic production in Prague, which the firm hopes to
re-establish in the future.
“Our production is not large, but
it has found its fans in Asia, Arabia and America fast. Coins and
medallions issued here have an extraordinary artistic value,”
Vojtech said in an email.
The Prague Mint has produced
designs from 50 renowned artists, and relies on traditional methods
to create the designs, plaster models and engraving, before
employing computer-controlled milling machines and lasers in
preparing the dies and striking the medals, according to Vojtech.
Most of the Prague Mint’s issues are Proof or Uncirculated .999
fine gold, silver or platinum medals, though it has issued copper
medals and antiqued silver medals for some issues.
Mintages
are always rather limited, in most cases to several hundred pieces
per design and finish. For instance, a BU silver medal marking the
200th anniversary of the Battle of Borodino in 2012 had a mintage of
a mere 74 pieces.
The medal was designed by Karel Zeman, whose
works return to the Napoleon Bonaparte leitmotif frequently. Marshal
Mikhail Kutuzov, who gazes off the field of the obverse, was a
Russian military commander who defeated Napoleon at the critical
battle on Sept. 7, 1812. The battle was the largest and bloodiest
single-day of action in the French invasion of Russia and the
Napoleonic Wars, a battle honored in numismatics both in the 1800s
and in the present day.
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