Nuremberg's klippes — square-format gold pieces — were never intended for ordinary commerce. By 1700 the city was producing them almost exclusively as presentation gifts and New Year's gratuities distributed by the city council, a tradition that had calcified into civic ritual over the preceding century. This particular half-ducat weight placed it at the modest end of the presentation spectrum, suitable for minor officials and guild functionaries rather than imperial dignitaries, who received multiple-ducat pieces of considerably more ambition.
Nuremberg retained its minting privileges as a Free Imperial City until 1806, when Napoleon's reorganization of German territories dissolved the institution entirely after more than five centuries of autonomous coinage.
Nuremberg's klippes — square-format gold pieces — were never intended for ordinary commerce. By 1700 the city was producing them almost exclusively as presentation gifts and New Year's gratuities distributed by the city council, a tradition that had calcified into civic ritual over the preceding century. This particular half-ducat weight placed it at the modest end of the presentation spectrum, suitable for minor officials and guild functionaries rather than imperial dignitaries, who received multiple-ducat pieces of considerably more ambition.
Nuremberg retained its minting privileges as a Free Imperial City until 1806, when Napoleon's reorganization of German territories dissolved the institution entirely after more than five centuries of autonomous coinage.