Designer
Bodo Broschat
A modern German coin designer working where architecture, sport, and civic subjects have to fit inside a small round field.
Bodo Broschat is part of the contemporary German commemorative program: the world of 2-euro state coins, 10-euro silver issues, and carefully modeled civic subjects.
The work
Official Münze Deutschland pages credit Bodo Broschat, Berlin on several modern issues. One useful example is the 2026 Bundesländer II Bremen 2-euro set, whose motif shows the Klimahaus Bremerhaven as an architectural ensemble. Another is the 2009 IAAF World Athletics Championships Berlin 10-euro coin, where the design has to put a moving athlete and stadium atmosphere into a compact commemorative field.
That range is why Broschat deserves a designer page rather than a passing mention. He is not attached to one isolated coin. His credits recur across modern German coinage, especially where a public place or event has to be translated into a design that remains readable after striking.
For collectors, his work sits in the part of German coinage where mint marks multiply the chase. A 2-euro set from Germany is not just one design; it usually appears from five mints. That gives a designer's work a broad collecting footprint.
Key facts
Why collectors notice
Modern German commemoratives often ask for restraint. The coin must honor a place, anniversary, or public event without turning into a medallic poster. Broschat's credited work is useful to study because it shows the modern German preference for composed, architectural, and event-specific imagery rather than loud symbolism.
Sources
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