The Trautson family held the mint right at Falkenstein, and Johann Franz — elevated to the rank of Count in 1598 — used coinage partly as a display of jurisdictional privilege at a time when the Habsburgs were steadily consolidating control over noble minting rights across the Austrian hereditary lands. Half ducat fractions from minor imperial counts are genuinely scarce; production runs were small, often struck to order for ceremonial gifts or fees rather than everyday exchange.
By 1635, the Thirty Years' War was consuming the region's metal supply and administrative attention. That any gold left a minor comital mint in that year is itself notable.
The Trautson family held the mint right at Falkenstein, and Johann Franz — elevated to the rank of Count in 1598 — used coinage partly as a display of jurisdictional privilege at a time when the Habsburgs were steadily consolidating control over noble minting rights across the Austrian hereditary lands. Half ducat fractions from minor imperial counts are genuinely scarce; production runs were small, often struck to order for ceremonial gifts or fees rather than everyday exchange.
By 1635, the Thirty Years' War was consuming the region's metal supply and administrative attention. That any gold left a minor comital mint in that year is itself notable.