You have not given sufficient information to answer your question. There were several different coins made of silver in Germany in 1910, both at the national and state level, as well as silver coins made for use in German East Africa. Silver coins from Austria and Liechtenstein, which use the German language, might also appear to be from Germany. And this doesn't even include coins from each of these countries that might be silver colored, but actually composed of a different metal.
To properly give an indication of value, you would need to provide the country, the denomination, the year, the mintmark (if any) and the condition of the coin. If you are not sure about any of these things (whether the issuer is Liechtenstein, Germany, or the German state of Prussia, for example), a more complete description of the coin might suffice (e.g., size, what portraits appear, what words appear on the coin, and where, etc.).
no
10 Pfennig - Wilhelm II
1890-1916
Copper-nickel - 4.00 g - ø 21 mm
no
10 Heller - Franz Joseph I
1892-1911
Nickel - 3 g - ø 18.9 mm
No. It was a 5 pfennig (not pfenning) coin, until the German currency was replaced by the Euro.
The 1979 German 2 Pfennig is worth about 2 dollars depending on its condition. Some of these coins can be more valuable including the 5 Pfennig coin.
One pfennig was to the German mark the way one cent is to the dollar. It's a common coin, worth maybe 10 cents.
The Pfennig is an old German coin dating back to the 9th Century. The Pfennig and the Penny are not directly related other than for the similarity of the names. It is thought that word Penny may be derived from Pfennig because of the meaning of "Pfanne" in German which is a pan-like, and the coin has embossing rather than being a flat metal disc.
That is the mintmark of the Munich mint on this German 50 pfennig.
The pfenning is old German currency, equivalent to the German Mark what the peeny ws to the dollar or the pence to the English Pound. Since the introduction of the Euro Germany no longer uses the pfennig.
It's made of copper-plated steel.
The 10 pfennig coin was first issued by the German Empire on 1873.
What's the price of camel coin 1913 to 1993
Neither "the" 1950 German pfennig nor any other mark- or pfennig-denominated coin is still in circulation in Germany. Remember that Germany switched to euros in 2002.
What's the price of camel coin 1913 to 1993
A phennig is an old German coin that started in the 9th century and ended in 2002 when the euro was introduced.