Rudolph II governed from Prague rather than Vienna, increasingly withdrawn from court life and administration by the early 1600s — a neglect that fueled the fraternal conflict with his brother Matthias that would eventually strip him of Austria, Hungary, and Bohemia before his death in 1612. The Hall mint in Tyrol was one of the most technically advanced in the Habsburg world at this period, having pioneered roller press minting in the mid-sixteenth century, though by 1603 screw press production had largely taken over for smaller denominations.
Tyrolian fractions of this era are frequently found with adjustment marks from the weighing process at Hall — a facility that maintained unusually strict weight tolerances for its time.
Rudolph II governed from Prague rather than Vienna, increasingly withdrawn from court life and administration by the early 1600s — a neglect that fueled the fraternal conflict with his brother Matthias that would eventually strip him of Austria, Hungary, and Bohemia before his death in 1612. The Hall mint in Tyrol was one of the most technically advanced in the Habsburg world at this period, having pioneered roller press minting in the mid-sixteenth century, though by 1603 screw press production had largely taken over for smaller denominations.
Tyrolian fractions of this era are frequently found with adjustment marks from the weighing process at Hall — a facility that maintained unusually strict weight tolerances for its time.