Friesland's half gold rider of 1585 was struck during the opening phase of the Dutch Revolt, when the northern provinces were consolidating their resistance against Spanish Habsburgs and financing that effort was an acute problem. Provincial minting rights were jealously guarded, and Friesland maintained its own output partly as a matter of political assertion — the province had formally joined the Union of Utrecht in 1579 and was intent on demonstrating fiscal independence. At 1.67g, this half denomination saw genuine mercantile circulation rather than hoarding, making survivors in any condition genuinely scarce.
Friesland's half gold rider of 1585 was struck during the opening phase of the Dutch Revolt, when the northern provinces were consolidating their resistance against Spanish Habsburgs and financing that effort was an acute problem. Provincial minting rights were jealously guarded, and Friesland maintained its own output partly as a matter of political assertion — the province had formally joined the Union of Utrecht in 1579 and was intent on demonstrating fiscal independence. At 1.67g, this half denomination saw genuine mercantile circulation rather than hoarding, making survivors in any condition genuinely scarce.