1946 AD., Luxembourg, Charlotte (1919-1964), 600th anniversary - death of John the Blind commemorative, 20 Francs, KM 47.
Luxembourg, Charlotte (1919-1964), 600th anniversary - death of John the Blind commemorative, engraver: Armand Bonnetain, 1946 AD.,
20 Francs (ø 27 mm / 8,64 g), 0.835 silver, 8,50 g. theor. mint weight, mintage 100.000 , axes coin alignment ↑↓ (180°), reeded edge,
Obv.: PRENZ· JEAN· VU· LETZEBURG / A. B. / · 20 F. · , his head facing left, engraver´s initials at truncation, shields of arms flanking below, the left one crowned, the right helmeted.
Rev.: · JANG· DE· BLANNEN· / SERVIAM / 26-VIII- / 1346 - 1946 A. B. , helmeted knight wearing suit of armour galloping right, sword in his raised right hand, shield on left arm, engraver´s initials r. below.
KM 47 .
Year / Mintage
no date (1946) 100,000
no date (1946) 100 (proof issue)
The body of John the Blind was moved to Kloster Altmünster ("Old-Minster Abbey") in Luxembourg. When the abbey was destroyed in 1543 the corpse was moved to Kloster Neumünster ("New-Minster Abbey") in Luxembourg. During the confusion of the French Revolution the mortal remains were salvaged by the Boch industrialist family (founders of Villeroy & Boch, ennobled in 1892) and hidden in an attic room in Mettlach on the Saar River. The legend has it that the monks of the abbey asked Pierre-Joseph Boch for this favor.
His son Jean-François Boch met with Prince Frederick William of Prussia on his voyage through the Rhineland in 1833 offering the remains as a gift. As Prince Frederick considered John the Blind to be one of his ancestors he ordered Karl Friedrich Schinkel to construct a funeral chapel. The chapel was built in 1834 and 1835 near Kastel-Staadt on a rock above the town. In 1838 on the anniversary of his death John the Blind was laid in a black marble Sarcophagus in a public ceremony.
In 1945 the Luxembourg government took the chance to obtain possession of the bones. In a cloak and dagger operation the remains were moved to the crypt of the Notre-Dame Cathedral, Luxembourg.