1849-1890 - Willem III - Silver 10 Cents (Dubbeltje)
A dubbeltje is a small former Dutch coin, originally made of silver, with a value of a tenth of a Dutch guilder.
Dubbeltje
Source: en.wikipedia.org
The name "dubbeltje" is the diminutive form of the Dutch word "dubbel" (Dutch for "double") because it was worth two stuivers. When the decimal system came to the Netherlands (about 1800) the 10 cent coin was named a "dubbeltje". Before the euro came the dubbeltje was the world's smallest coin in use; it weighed 1.5 grams. Formerly in the Netherlands the silver stuiver (0.685 gram) and the halfje (1.25 gram) were smaller.
Monarch: William III
Mint: Utrecht
Material: Silver
Metal: Silver .640
Weight: 1.4 Gram
Diameter: 15 mm (1848-1890)
Thickness: 0.96 mm (1849-1890)
Obverse: Kings Bust to the right
Reverse: Value and mint year between two bonded oak branches
Edge: Reeded with no edge lettering
Mintage Years: 1849, 1850, 1853, 1855, 1856, 1859, 1862, 1863, 1868, 1869, 1871, 1973, 1874, 1876-1882, 1884, 1885, 1887, 1889, 1890
REF
Coin Engraver: JOHANN PETER SCHOUBERG
Source: The Numismatic Circular, Volumes 12-13
July 1904 - Spink and Son's - Page: 7700
I.P.S. Vide JOHANN PETER SCHOUBERG - Medallist at Utrecht first half of the nineteenth century.
REF
10 Cents - Willem III
Source: en.numista.com
KM# 80
Features
Country Netherlands
Years 1849-1890
Value 10 Cents (0.1 NLG)
Metal Silver (.640)
Weight 1.4 g
Diameter 15 mm
Thickness 0.96 mm
Shape Round
Orientation Coin alignment ↑↓
Demonetized yes
Edge: milled
REF