Category
page 1Groschen

groschen
thumb|upright=1.4|Barile (large groschen), Florence, 1506
Prague groschen
coin
Stuiver
The stuiver was a coin used in the Netherlands, worth of a guilder (16 penning or 8 duit, later 5 cents). It was also minted on the Lower Rhine region and the Dutch colonies. The word can still refer to the 5 euro cent coin, which has almost exactly the same diameter and colour despite being over twice the value of the older coin.

Batzen
thumb|200px|Bernese batzen (15th century)
thumb|40-Batzen Thaler, Vaud, 1812
thumb|Bern: 5 Batzen 1826, concordat type
thumb|Freiburg im Üechtland|Freiburg (Freyburg): 1 Batzen 1830
The batzen is a historical Swiss, south German, and Austrian coin. It was first produced in Bern, Switzerland, from 1492 and remained in use there until the mid-19th century.
Kraków grosz
Medieval Polish coins
Guldengroschen
thumb|An official restrike of the 1486 Tiroler Guldengroschen
Silbergroschen
The Silbergroschen was a coin used in Prussia and several other German Confederation states in northern Germany during the 19th century, worth one thirtieth of a Thaler.
Mariengroschen
The Mariengroschen ("St. Mary's groschen") is an historical coin that was a type of groschen minted in Lower Saxony and Westphalia from the 16th to the 19th century. It was named after the Virgin Mary who was depicted on the reverse side.
albus
currency in parts of the German Empire
Blaffert
Blaffert was the name of two different types of historical European coin. It was also called the Blafferd or, in Upper German, the Plappart, Plappert or Blaphart. It derives from the French blafard meaning "pale" or "bright".
Meißner Groschen
Weißpfennig
The Weißpfennig (literally white penny; Latin - denarius albus) was a form of silver groschen that was circulated in the Holy Roman Empire in the Late Middle Ages. It was also known as an albus or a Rhenish groschen (rheinischer Groschen). It was minted from the second half of the 14th century onwards in the Lower Rhine region by the four Rhenish electors of the Holy Roman Empire, who set up a joint mint in 1385–86. It was intended for everyday use, whilst the gold Rhenish gulden of the same era was intended as a trade coin. Those minted in Mainz were inscribed on one side 'Mainzer Rad' ("Main
Guter Groschen
Sechsling
thumb|Medieval Sechsling, Hamburg, 1392
thumb|Sechsling, Hamburg, 1841
The Sechsling, also Sößling, Søsling (Dan./Norw.) or Sechser, was the name of a type of coin with a value of six Pfennigs, representing half a Groschen or half Schilling depending on the monetary system.