Lübeck's fractional thaler coinage of this period reflects the city's stubborn insistence on monetary independence during one of the most chaotic currency episodes in German history — the Kipper- und Wipperzeit, a debasement crisis that swept the Empire from roughly 1619 to 1623 and saw scores of mints produce wildly underweight silver. Lübeck, as a Free Imperial City with its own mint rights, resisted the worst of it, which is partly why its small silver retained credibility across the Baltic trade network.
The sixty-year production window for this type is unusually long, suggesting periodic restriking rather than continuous output.
Lübeck's fractional thaler coinage of this period reflects the city's stubborn insistence on monetary independence during one of the most chaotic currency episodes in German history — the Kipper- und Wipperzeit, a debasement crisis that swept the Empire from roughly 1619 to 1623 and saw scores of mints produce wildly underweight silver. Lübeck, as a Free Imperial City with its own mint rights, resisted the worst of it, which is partly why its small silver retained credibility across the Baltic trade network.
The sixty-year production window for this type is unusually long, suggesting periodic restriking rather than continuous output.