Rudolph II famously governed from Prague rather than Vienna, making Bohemia the effective center of Habsburg power during his reign — a fact that directly drove the proliferation of Bohemian minting activity in this period. The Budweis mint (České Budějovice) operated under municipal authority, and its output was tightly tied to the silver supply flowing through southern Bohemia.
By 1605, Rudolph's grip on his territories was visibly weakening. His brother Matthias had already begun maneuvering against him, and the Long Turkish War was draining imperial finances. Coinage from this precise year sits at the hinge of that dynastic fracture.
Rudolph II famously governed from Prague rather than Vienna, making Bohemia the effective center of Habsburg power during his reign — a fact that directly drove the proliferation of Bohemian minting activity in this period. The Budweis mint (České Budějovice) operated under municipal authority, and its output was tightly tied to the silver supply flowing through southern Bohemia.
By 1605, Rudolph's grip on his territories was visibly weakening. His brother Matthias had already begun maneuvering against him, and the Long Turkish War was draining imperial finances. Coinage from this precise year sits at the hinge of that dynastic fracture.