Christian II was an infant when this coin was struck — born in 1583, he was nine years old in 1592, nominally co-ruler alongside his father's brother John George I and his great-uncle August. The arrangement was a regency in practice, though Saxon protocol demanded all three names appear on the coinage. August died in February 1586, meaning his inclusion here likely reflects a continuation die or a deliberate dynastic statement rather than his living authority.
The three-ruler format on Saxon Albertine coinage of this decade is a well-documented cataloguing headache, with Clauss/Kahnt cross-references frequently diverging from Merseburg collection numbering on die marriage specifics.
Christian II was an infant when this coin was struck — born in 1583, he was nine years old in 1592, nominally co-ruler alongside his father's brother John George I and his great-uncle August. The arrangement was a regency in practice, though Saxon protocol demanded all three names appear on the coinage. August died in February 1586, meaning his inclusion here likely reflects a continuation die or a deliberate dynastic statement rather than his living authority.
The three-ruler format on Saxon Albertine coinage of this decade is a well-documented cataloguing headache, with Clauss/Kahnt cross-references frequently diverging from Merseburg collection numbering on die marriage specifics.