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| Issuer | Kingdom of Württemberg |
|---|---|
| Year | 1838-1858 |
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| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| Reference(s) | KM#573, KR#98, AKS#86, Jaeg 1 Wu#69a |
| Obverse description | Bare-headed effigy of King Wilhelm I of Württemberg facing left, rendered in high relief with finely detailed hair. The truncation is clean and unadorned. The engraver's name VOIGT appears incuse in small capitals at the base of the neck. The circular legend reads WILHELM KÖNIG V. WÜRTTEMBERG, arranged along the periphery between two plain borders, with a fine toothed rim enclosing the design. |
|---|---|
| Obverse script | Log in to see details |
| Obverse lettering | WILHELM KÖNIG V. WÜRTTEMBERG VOIGT |
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| Additional information |
Württemberg's half gulden coinage of this period was produced under the monetary framework of the South German Currency Union, a regional agreement struck in 1837 that standardized coin weights and fineness across Bavaria, Württemberg, Baden, and several smaller states. The gulden — rather than the Prussian thaler — was deliberately retained as the unit of account, a political signal that the southern kingdoms had no intention of deferring to Berlin on monetary matters.
William I reigned for over four decades and was notably resistant to Prussian dominance in German affairs until late in his life. His coins circulated freely across the union's member states by treaty obligation.