This piece dates to the first Ottoman siege of Vienna in 1529, when Suleiman the Magnificent's forces surrounded the city from late September through mid-October. Cut off from imperial mints, the city authorities improvised coinage from available silver to pay defenders and maintain internal commerce. These emergency issues were struck on crudely prepared planchets with whatever dies could be produced under siege conditions, which accounts for the irregular fabric common across the type.
The siege lifted on October 16th after Ottoman supply lines collapsed and early winter set in — the city held, but the coinage it produced in those weeks remains one of the few tangible artifacts of that specific military crisis.
This piece dates to the first Ottoman siege of Vienna in 1529, when Suleiman the Magnificent's forces surrounded the city from late September through mid-October. Cut off from imperial mints, the city authorities improvised coinage from available silver to pay defenders and maintain internal commerce. These emergency issues were struck on crudely prepared planchets with whatever dies could be produced under siege conditions, which accounts for the irregular fabric common across the type.
The siege lifted on October 16th after Ottoman supply lines collapsed and early winter set in — the city held, but the coinage it produced in those weeks remains one of the few tangible artifacts of that specific military crisis.