Skip to content
Precious Metals Data Aggregator
Loading market data...

5 Euro Copper Musikverein Coin Unc

Material
Base Metals
Category
Coins
Fineness (‰)
Unknown
Mass (g)
8.900
Premium (%)
Unknown
Price
Unknown
Dealer
Muenze Oesterreich
Dealer country
Unknown
Last price update
Unknown
Last seen
Unknown
Available until
Capsule size (mm)
Coin design
Core
Delivery
Denomination
Depth (%)
Details
Diameter (mm)
Dimensions
Edge
Engraver
Extra property
Extra property
Extra property
Face value
Fine weight (g)
Finish
Fluorescence
Grade
Grader
Guard
Has certificate
Heads
Inner Pack Qty
In stock
In stock quantity
Insurance
Is deliverable
Is for delivery only
Is IRA eligible
Is LSP
Is numbered ingot
Issue date
Is under seal
Keywords
Main base metal
Mintage
Mintage proof
Mintage special uncirculated
Mintage uncirculated
Minting year(s)
Mint mark
Numista ID
Occasion
Outer Pack Qty
Package dimensions
Packaging
Producer
Proportions
Purity
Quality
Ring
Series
Shipping
SKU
Symmetry
Table (%)
Tails
Taxation
Theme
Thickness (mm)
Product country
Safe location

Celebrating the 150th anniversary of the opening of Vienna’s legendary Musikverein concert hall in 1870, the New Year coin 2020 features the Greek god, Apollo. The image of the god of music and dance is taken from a frieze, designed by August Eisenmenger (1830-1907), found on the ceiling of the Golden Hall of the Musikverein, the spiritual home of classical music in the Austrian capital. New Year in Austria is all about music. We wish you a harmonious 2020. Considered one of the finest concert halls in the world, the Musikverein was designed by Danish architect Theophil Hansen in the Neoclassical style of an ancient Greek temple. The building was inaugurated on 6 January 1870, when the first night audience was captivated by the combination of its architectural and acoustic beauty. However, the legendary sound of the Golden Hall is not the product of scientific precision but of fortuitous happenstance, as Hansen had to rely on his intuition rather than on studies of architectural acoustics. Fortunately, the wonderful architecture resulted in sublime sound. In Eisenmenger’s frieze, the youthful Apollo floats above the audience, no doubt buoyed by all the beauty he has witnessed over the past century and a half. The coin motif shows him, lyre in hand, a toga covering his lower body. In the background, the famous organ of the Golden Hall can be seen.