Charles Theodor inherited Bavaria in 1777 upon the death of Maximilian III Joseph, triggering the War of the Bavarian Succession as Frederick the Great moved to block Habsburg territorial ambitions over the electorate. The conflict was brief and nearly bloodless — soldiers on both sides spent more energy foraging than fighting — but it reshaped the political map of southern Germany and left Charles Theodor ruling a territory he had never sought and a population that largely despised him.
The Conventionsthaler standard itself dated to the 1753 Vienna Convention, fixing coin weight and fineness across the Habsburg monetary sphere. KM#560 falls within the four-year window before Charles Theodor's unpopular attempt to exchange Bavaria for the Austrian Netherlands collapsed under Prussian and domestic opposition.
Charles Theodor inherited Bavaria in 1777 upon the death of Maximilian III Joseph, triggering the War of the Bavarian Succession as Frederick the Great moved to block Habsburg territorial ambitions over the electorate. The conflict was brief and nearly bloodless — soldiers on both sides spent more energy foraging than fighting — but it reshaped the political map of southern Germany and left Charles Theodor ruling a territory he had never sought and a population that largely despised him.
The Conventionsthaler standard itself dated to the 1753 Vienna Convention, fixing coin weight and fineness across the Habsburg monetary sphere. KM#560 falls within the four-year window before Charles Theodor's unpopular attempt to exchange Bavaria for the Austrian Netherlands collapsed under Prussian and domestic opposition.