The bronze 1- and 2-pfennig ceased production after the 1916 coinage, as had the copper-nickel 5-pfennig in 1915. But this 1916d 10-pfennig (last of the 1890-1916 type) is a special case. Only München struck German copper-nickel for circulation in 1916, and only these 10-pfennig pieces were produced.
As it turned out, these 1916d 10-pfennig pieces would be Germany’s last copper-nickel coins for some time.
Straight nickel would reappear as a German coinage metal with the new Weimar 50-reichspfennig of 1927-38. And again nickel would be used for the 1-reichsmark of 1933-39 and the 50-reichspfennig of 1938-39.
But not until 1949 and the “Bank Deutscher Länder” 50-pfennig of the embryonic Bundesrepublik would copper-nickel again be used for a German circulating coin, some 33 years after it had last appeared in this 1916d 10-pfennig.
