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  1. Bremen Thaler. Bremen accepted the Friedrich d'or gold pistole for 5 thalers. The Thaler was the currency of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen until 1873, when Germany adopted the gold mark (ℳ). It was divided into 72 Grote, each of 5 Schwaren.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ThalerThaler - Wikipedia

    Thaler and half thaler coins were minted by the cities of Zürich (1512), Bern, Lucerne, Zug, Basel, Fribourg, Solothurn, Schaffhausen, St. Gallen and Geneva. The Reformed cities began to represent "city views" on the obverse of their thalers, as they did not have the option to represent either patron saint or ruling princes.

  3. El tálero (del alemán Taler —escrito Thaler hasta 1901—, “vallense, del valle”) es una antigua moneda de plata de Alemania. Etimológicamente, "Thaler" es una abreviación de "Joachimsthaler", una moneda de la ciudad de Joachimsthal en Bohemia (actualmente Jáchymov, República Checa ), donde se acuñaron en 1518.

  4. The Bremen thaler retained the gold standard until German unification in 1871, with five thalers to a Friedrich d'or pistole, or about 1.2 g fine gold per thaler. It was also divided differently, into 72 grote .

  5. Only Bremen stayed on the Thaler Gold standard of 5 thalers per pistole until German Reunification in 1871. Appearance. On the obverse of the Friedrich d'or was the king's head, and on the reverse was an eagle standing on its shield. See also. Money portal; Ephraimiten; Bibliography

  6. The gold-based Bremen thaler was converted directly to the mark at a rate of 1 Thaler gold = or 3.32 marks. The Hamburg mark courant or currency was converted at 1 mark = 1.2 Imperial marks, and the Hamburg mark banco of the Bank of Hamburg was converted at 1 mark banco = 1.5 Imperial marks.

  7. The Thaler was the currency of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen until 1873. It was divided into 72 Grote, each of 5 Schwaren. While initially identical to the North German thaler before the 1750s, it was the only currency to maintain the gold standard of 5 thalers to a Friedrich d'or pistole from the 1750s until 1873, long after all other states adopted the Conventionsthaler.