Oldesloe's civic coinage emerged from its status as a salt-trading town on the Trave river, where the local salt works generated enough commercial traffic to justify a municipal issue independent of the Holstein counts who nominally controlled the surrounding territory. The Witten was the dominant small-silver denomination across the north German trading zone throughout the fourteenth century, and fractional pieces like this quarter unit were struck to handle the smallest retail transactions at market.
The Jesse and Lange references place this firmly within the documented Lübeck monetary sphere, where weight standards were jealously guarded by treaty among participating towns.
Oldesloe's civic coinage emerged from its status as a salt-trading town on the Trave river, where the local salt works generated enough commercial traffic to justify a municipal issue independent of the Holstein counts who nominally controlled the surrounding territory. The Witten was the dominant small-silver denomination across the north German trading zone throughout the fourteenth century, and fractional pieces like this quarter unit were struck to handle the smallest retail transactions at market.
The Jesse and Lange references place this firmly within the documented Lübeck monetary sphere, where weight standards were jealously guarded by treaty among participating towns.