Lüneburg's wealth in the sixteenth century was built almost entirely on salt — the city controlled the Lüneburg Heath saltworks and supplied much of northern Europe, making it one of the most prosperous municipalities in the Holy Roman Empire despite its modest political footprint. City coinage of this period reflects that independent civic confidence, struck on municipal rather than territorial authority at a moment when Lüneburg's mercantile elite still commanded enough autonomy to issue substantial silver denominations on their own account.
1547 was the year of the Schmalkaldic War's decisive conclusion at Mühlberg, a political earthquake that reshaped northern German power structures within months of this coin's production.
Lüneburg's wealth in the sixteenth century was built almost entirely on salt — the city controlled the Lüneburg Heath saltworks and supplied much of northern Europe, making it one of the most prosperous municipalities in the Holy Roman Empire despite its modest political footprint. City coinage of this period reflects that independent civic confidence, struck on municipal rather than territorial authority at a moment when Lüneburg's mercantile elite still commanded enough autonomy to issue substantial silver denominations on their own account.
1547 was the year of the Schmalkaldic War's decisive conclusion at Mühlberg, a political earthquake that reshaped northern German power structures within months of this coin's production.