Franz Georg von Schönborn died in January 1756 after a three-decade tenure as Archbishop-Elector of Trier, during which he also held the sees of Worms and Commecy simultaneously — an accumulation of ecclesiastical offices that drew repeated friction with Rome. Death memorial issues in the small German states were a specific currency convention: struck in limited quantity, they circulated but also functioned as devotional keepsakes distributed among clergy and noble households at the time of interment.
The Schönborn family dominated Rhenish ecclesiastical appointments throughout the first half of the 18th century, placing members across multiple prince-bishoprics in a coordinated dynastic strategy. Franz Georg was the last of them to hold Trier.
Franz Georg von Schönborn died in January 1756 after a three-decade tenure as Archbishop-Elector of Trier, during which he also held the sees of Worms and Commecy simultaneously — an accumulation of ecclesiastical offices that drew repeated friction with Rome. Death memorial issues in the small German states were a specific currency convention: struck in limited quantity, they circulated but also functioned as devotional keepsakes distributed among clergy and noble households at the time of interment.
The Schönborn family dominated Rhenish ecclesiastical appointments throughout the first half of the 18th century, placing members across multiple prince-bishoprics in a coordinated dynastic strategy. Franz Georg was the last of them to hold Trier.