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1/2 Batzen - Albert IV

Issuer Bavaria, Duchy of
Year 1506
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Currency Thaler (1505-1622)
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Obverse script Latin
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Reverse description Central field depicts the Bavarian rampant lion passant-rampant, turned to the left, crowned, with an elaborately curled tail and detailed mane, rendered in a vigorous late-Gothic style typical of early sixteenth-century Bavarian coinage. The lion occupies the full field within a beaded inner border. The surrounding circular legend, in Latin, reads IVST9 NON DERELIN9VETVR (abbreviation for IUSTUS NON DERELINQUETUR, meaning 'The righteous shall not be forsaken'), a scriptural motto commonly employed on Bavarian issues of this period.
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Additional information

Albert IV of Bavaria secured papal recognition of primogeniture succession for the Wittelsbach dynasty in 1506 — the same year this coin was struck — ending generations of territorial fragmentation caused by inheritance divisions among male heirs. The Batzen denomination itself was a recent Swiss innovation, adopted widely across southern German territories during the 1490s as a practical response to the chronic shortage of mid-value silver currency.

The Witt. 200 A/a distinction suggests early die state; collector differentiation within this type runs deep, and the MB#17 / Hahn#7 concordance places this firmly among the better-documented half-Batzen issues of the period.

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