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1904, Hesse-Darmstadt, Enest Louis. Beautiful Silver 2 Mark Coin. PCGS MS-65!

$ 152.59

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Grade: MS 65
  • Composition: Silver
  • Year: 1904
  • Circulated/Uncirculated: Uncirculated
  • Certification: PCGS
  • KM Number: 372
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Germany
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Denomination: 2 Mark

    Description

    CoinWorldTV
    1904, Hesse-Darmstadt, Enest Louis. Beautiful  Silver 2 Mark Coin. PCGS MS-65!
    Mint Year: 1904
    Reference: KM-372.
    Condition:
    Certified and graded by PCGS as MS-65!
    Denomination: 2 Mark - 400th Anniversary of Philip "the Magnanimous" of Hesse
    Weight: 11,13gm
    Diameter: 28mm
    Material: Silver
    Obverse:
    Jugate conjoined busts of Ernest Louis and Philip I "the Magnanimous" left.
    Legend: PHILIPP . LANDGRAF . Z . HESSEN . U ERNST . LUDWIG . GROSSHERZOG . V . HESSEN . U . B . R.
    Exergue: 13 . NOV . . 1504 . 1904 .
    Reverse:
    Crown of the German Empire above heraldic eagle of Germany with prussian shield at chest and star order.
    Legend: DEUTSCHES REICH 1904 * ZWEI MARK *
    Authenticity unconditionally guaranteed.
    Bid with confidence!
    Ernest Louis
    Charles Albert William (de:
    Ernst Ludwig Karl Albert Wilhelm
    ), (25 November 1868 – 9 October 1937) was the last
    Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine
    from 1892 until 1918. His nickname was Ernie.
    Ernest Louis was the fourth child and eldest son of Grand Duke Louis IV and Princess Alice of the United Kingdom, daughter of Victoria of the United Kingdom and Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. He was an older brother to Alexandra of Hesse, Empress Consort of Nicholas II of Russia.
    Ernest Louis's early life was shrouded with death. When he was five, his younger brother Friedrich died. The two boys had been playing a game in their mother's bedroom   when the younger boy fell through an unlatched window onto the balcony   twenty feet below. It was not a great distance, and at first, Friedrich   seemed only shaken. However, he suffered from hemophilia,   and had begun bleeding on the brain. He lapsed into unconsciousness   that afternoon and died. Ernest Louis was inconsolable. "When I die, you   must die too, and all the others. Why can't we all die together? I   don't want to die alone, like Frittie," he told his nurse. To his mother   he said, "I dreamt that I was dead and was gone up to Heaven, and there   I asked God to let me have Frittie again and he came to me and took my   hand." The younger child's grave became a place of regular pilgrimage   for the family, causing Ernest Louis to become obsessed with thoughts of   death and dying alone.
    In 1878, an epidemic of diphtheria swept through Darmstadt. All of the children (except Princess Elisabeth, who was sent to stay with their paternal grandmother Princess Elizabeth of Prussia) and their father fell ill. Princess Alice cared for her sick husband and children, but on 16 November, the youngest of them, Princess May,   died. Alice kept the news from her family for several weeks, until   Ernest Louis, who was devoted to little May, asked for his sister.   Ernest Louis was overcome with grief when his mother revealed May's   death. In an effort to comfort her grieving son, Alice kissed him, and   within a week, she fell ill and soon died, on December 14. Her death   affected Ernest Louis for the rest of his life.
    Even after his death, however, his childhood wish to not die alone   echoed into the next generation. Shortly after his father's death,   Prince Louis was to marry the Hon. Margaret Campbell-Geddes, daughter of Lord Geddes,   in England. His older brother, the Hereditary Grand Duke George   Donatus, and the rest of the family planned to take a plane from Hesse   to England. However, the plane never reached its destination. George   Donatus, along with his wife, Princess Cecilie of Greece and Denmark, their two young sons, Louis and Alexander, his mother Grand Duchess Eleonore, the children's nurse and a family friend died in an accident when their plane crashed near Ostend on their way to his brother's marriage. Cecilie was pregnant with her fourth child at the time of the crash and the stillborn infant was found among the remains. Their youngest child, Johanna,   who was not on the plane, was adopted by her uncle Louis, who was to   remain childless. The little girl survived her parents and brothers by   eighteen months, dying in 1939 of meningitis.
    In 1892 Ernest Louis succeeded his father as Grand Duke.
    Throughout his life, Ernest Louis was a patron of the arts, founding the Darmstadt Artists' Colony, and was himself an author of poems, plays, essays, and piano compositions. Ernest Louis served in the German military during World War I. At the end of the war he lost his throne during the revolution of 1918, despite his refusal to abdicate.
    In October 1937, Ernest Louis died at Schloß Wolfsgarten, near Darmstadt in Hesse.   He received what amounted to a state funeral on 16 November 1937 and   was buried next to his daughter, Elisabeth, in a new open air burial   ground next to the New Mausoleum he had built in the Rosenhöhe park in Darmstadt.
    Ernest Louis had commissioned the New Mausoleum in 1903. It was   consecrated on 3 November 1910, in the presence of the Grand Duke and   his immediate family, that is to say, his wife Eleonore, Tsar Nicholas   II and the Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna of Russia, Grand Duchess   Elisabeth Feodorovna (Ella), Victoria Princess Louis of Battenberg and   her daughter, Louise, and Prince and Princess Heinrich of Prussia. The   remains of Grand Duke Ludwig IV, Princess Alice, Grand Duchess of Hesse   and by Rhine and their children 'Frittie' and 'May' were re-interred in   the New Mausoleum.
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