Also known as new minting, this refers to a coin remade by the government that originally issued it, and is manufactured from the original die.
a coin made years after the original edition but from the same dies
in Third Reich awards, a restrike often refers to awards that were produced after the war with original dies. These are therefore not original, and should be viewed as such.
A coin which is struck some time (normally years) after the original striking using the original dies.
The print or a whole edition pulled from formerly printed plates, blocks, stones, pr stencils after the original edition has been printed or cancelled. These prints should show a defacing mark to note that original edition has been cancelled.
officially issued reproduction of a former circulating coin.
A coin from genuine dies, struck later than the year indicated on the coin, usually to satisfy collectors.
a later impression from an unrelated publishing project
an authentic genuine coin, usually issued by the same country as the original, often with the original earlier date, but were actually struck and issued at a later date
a piece that has been struck from the genuine original dies but at a much later date
a print produced from the matrix of an original print, but was not printed as part of the original publishing venture or as part of a connected, subsequent publishing venture
A map made later from the original plate.
A coin minted from original dies, but produced at a later date than the originals.
A coin struck after the original date of issue, and backdated, usually by the original issuer as an official issue, but also unofficially. Also usually identical to the original, but sometimes differentiated by mintmarks or other small design changes. The term restrike is often used euphemistically referring to a counterfeit.
A coin struck with authentic dies later than the date it bears
A coin struck with authentic dies later than the original date of issue.
A map or view printed from the original plate, block, or stone, after the plate, block, or stone had fallen into disuse. The collector of maps will seldom, if ever, encounter restrikes since few plates or blocks have survived.
a coin that is minted using the original dies, but at a later date
A new item made from an original plate or mold.
An etching plate that is reworked and new editions pulled from new plate.
Coin struck after date which appears on coin.
A coin struck from a genuine die at a date later than the original issue.
Coin, medal or token produced from dies subsequent to the original use. Usually restrikes are made long after the original and can often be identified bv marks caused by damage, pitting or corrosion of the dies after they were taken out of service.
A modern replica of previously issued coins. Governments and their mints can choose to “restrike” a previous issue rather than introduce new coinage.
Produced after the original edition was issued and from the original plates or blocks. Often made years after the artist's death.
a coin minted from original dies, however at a later date than originally intended.
A coin struck from genuine dies at a date later than its original issue.
Any coin struck after the original striking date or the date appearing on the coin.
A coin struck later than indicated by its date, often with different dies.
The term used to describe the reprinting of an edition (generally of etchings, engravings, etc.) from original or reworked plates, usually after the death of the artist.
Additional prints made from a master plate, block, lithograph stone, etc. after the original edition has been exhausted.
a coin or metal struck from an original die at some time after the original issue.