They will be useful to:
Some cookies are technically necessary and exempt from consent. Others, non-mandatory, may be used for ad and content personalization, ad and content measurement, audience insights and product development
Necessary cookies are useful for proper site operation. They enable basic functions like page navigation and access to secure areas. The website cannot function properly without these cookies.
Personalization cookies allow a site to remember information that changes how the site behaves or displays, like your preferred language or region.
Marketing cookies help website owners, through anonymous information collection, to understand how visitors interact with websites.
Statistics cookies enable visitor tracking on the site. They aim to offer more relevant ad targeting, more interesting for publishers and advertisers.
These are cookies that don't fit any category above or have not yet been classified.
Secure payment
3D secure
Delivery in 72 hours
Sending with tracking
Customer service
(+33)2 44 51 00 13
LOT 5 X 2 Euros Commemorative GERMANY 2020
1 of each workshop
Theme: 50 years of the Genuflection of Willy Brandt in Warsaw
Quality: UNC (uncirculated).
Print run: 30,000,000 copies in UNC
Bi-metallic (nickel silver centre - cupronickel ring) - 8 5 g - 25 75 mm in diameter - 2 20 mm thick.
Non-contractual visual
Willy Brandt's kneeling in Warsaw (Kniefall von Warschau in German, the Warsaw genuflection) took place on 7 December 1970, the day the Warsaw Agreement between the Polish People's Republic and the Federal Republic of Germany was signed.
Willy Brandt knelt in front of the memorial to the dead of the Warsaw ghetto, where 450,000 Jews were crammed together and whose uprising in 1943 was savagely put down by the Nazis. In making this gesture, the German Chancellor asked for forgiveness for the German crimes of the Second World War. Willy Brandt's gesture came as a surprise: it was much debated in Germany, but helped to change the image of the Federal Republic abroad. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1971 (a first for a German since the war) for this symbolic action and, more generally, for his participation in Ostpolitik (a policy of rapprochement with the Communist bloc that was heavily criticised in Germany).
Edge: striated and inscribed with the inscription EINIGKEIT UND RECHT UND FREIHEIT" (unity and justice and freedom) followed by the German eagle