Information about National Symbol: Federal Eagle of Germany

Federal Eagle of Germany
Germany / Two Marks 1981 Kurt Schumacher

The Federal Republic of Germany adopted the Weimar eagle as its symbol on 20 January 1950. Since then it has been known as the Bundesadler (Federal Eagle). The legal basis of the use of this coat of arms is the announcement by President Theodor Heuss, Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and Interior Minister Gustav Heinemann of 20 January 1950, which is word for word identical to the announcement by President Friedrich Ebert and Interior Minister Erich Koch-Weser by 11 November 1919, modified only slightly to replace "imperial eagle" with "federal eagle" and "imperial coat of arms" with "federal coat of arms":

"By reason of a decision of the Federal Government I hereby announce that the Federal coat of arms on a gold-yellow shield shows the one headed black eagle, the head turned to the right, the wings open but with closed feathering, beak, tongue and claws of red colour. If the Federal Eagle is shown without a frame, the same charge and colours as those of the eagle of the Federal coat of arms are to be used, but the tops of the feathers are directed outside. The patterns kept by the Federal Ministry of the Interior are definitive for the heraldic design. The artistic design is reserved to each special purpose."

As was the case in the Weimar Republic, minor artistic modifications were allowed for particular purposes. The directives issued by the Federal Minister of the Interior in 1950, which distinguish between "documentary" and "decorative" purposes, note that any person is entitled to use the federal eagle for artistic purposes.

Thus, the federal eagle is portrayed differently on coins, stamps and letterheads, for example. In 1953, the artist Ludwig Gies, from Cologne, was commissioned by the German Bundestag to design a Bundestag eagle for its plenary chamber in Bonn. Today, the eagle designed by Gies can still be seen in the Bundestag's plenary chamber in the Reichstag Building in Berlin, though it was revamped in 1999 by the Lais studio.

Official depictions of the federal eagle can be seen on the federal coat of arms, the Federal Institutions Flag, along with the standards of the Federal President and official stamps and seals.

In the German Democratic Republic (GDR), the eagle was not part of the state coat of arms. The GDR's coat of arms was defined as "a hammer and compasses, framed by a wreath of grain ears, with a ribbon of black, red and gold wound around the bottom section".

Since reunification in 1990, the federal eagle has once again been the emblem of the whole of Germany.

Federal Eagle of Germany - Example/s on coins
Germany / Two Marks 1981 Kurt Schumacher

Federal Eagle of Germany on 2 DM Coin

Germany / Two Marks 1981 Kurt Schumacher

The Federal Eagle is seen here on a copper-nickel 2 Deutsche Mark coin.

Federal Eagle of Germany - showing 40 of 240 coins (Page 3 of 3)
NameMintageLegend
Two Euro 2003 Federal Eagle 112,344,000 ************ 2003
One Euro 2003 81,690,000 ************ 2003
Two Euro 2004 Federal Eagle 75,056,000 ************ 2004
One Euro 2004 242,165,000 ************ 2004
One Euro 2005 60,855,000 ************ 2005
Two Euro 2005 Federal Eagle (mint sets only) 925,000 ************ 2005
Two Euro 2006 Federal Eagle (mint sets only) 890,000 ************ 2006
One Euro 2006 (mint sets only) 825,000 ************ 2006
One Euro 2007 (mint sets only) 765,000 ************ 2007
Two Euro 2008 Federal Eagle 57,750,000 ************ 2008
One Euro 2008 (mint sets only) 650,000 ************ 2008
One Euro 2009 (mint sets only) 550,000 ************ 2009
Two Euro 2010 Federal Eagle 98,550,000 ************ 2010
One Euro 2010 (mint sets only) 550,000 ************ 2010
Two Euro 2011 Federal Eagle 119,334,000 ************ 2011
One Euro 2011 (mint sets only) 550,000 ************ 2011
One Euro 2012 (mint sets only) 425,000 ************ 2012
One Euro 2013 (mint sets only) 335,000 ************ 2013
Two Euro 2014 Federal Eagle 28,312,000 ************ 2014
One Euro 2014 (mint sets only) 312,000 ************ 2014
One Euro 2015 (mint sets only) 317,100 ************ 2015
Two Euro 2016 Federal Eagle 71,315,000 ************ 2016
One Euro 2016 (mint sets only) 315,000 ************ 2016
Two Euro 2017 Federal Eagle 61,778,000 ************ 2017
One Euro 2017 (mint sets only) 778,000 ************ 2017
One Euro 2018 (mint sets only) 733,400 ************ 2018
Two Euro 2019 Federal Eagle 75,872,500 ************ 2019
One Euro 2019 (mint sets only) 622,500 ************ 2019
Two Euro 2020 Federal Eagle 80,583,000 ************ 2020
One Euro 2020 (mint sets only) 583,000 ************ 2020
Two Euro 2021 Federal Eagle 30,222,500 ************ 2021
One Euro 2021 (mint sets only) 222,500 ************ 2021
Two Euro 2022 Federal Eagle (mint sets only) 805,000 ************ 2022
One Euro 2022 (mint sets only) 805,000 ************ 2022
Two Euro 2023 Federal Eagle 55,595,000 ************ 2023
One Euro 2023 (mint sets only) 595,000 ************ 2023
Two Euro 2024 Federal Eagle 43,531,500 ************ 2024
One Euro 2024 (mint sets only) 531,500 ************ 2024
Two Euro 2025 Federal Eagle 6,000,000 ************ 2025
One Euro 2025 (mint sets only) unknown ************ 2025
Showing 201 to 240 of 240 Coins.
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Federal Eagle of Germany: Details
Year1950
CountryGermany
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