Leopold I's small silver deniers were struck continuously across multiple Hungarian mints — Kremnitz, Nagybánya, and Pozsony among them — throughout a period when the kingdom was effectively split between Habsburg administration and Ottoman occupation. The prolonged minting window of over three decades reflects administrative persistence under extraordinary pressure, not prosperity. Hungary's mint infrastructure was repeatedly disrupted by the Long Turkish War and the Thököly Uprising of 1678–1685, which briefly handed significant portions of upper Hungary to anti-Habsburg rebels backed by the Porte.
The ÉH references 1110 and the dual H-numbers indicate recognized die and mint variants within this run.
Leopold I's small silver deniers were struck continuously across multiple Hungarian mints — Kremnitz, Nagybánya, and Pozsony among them — throughout a period when the kingdom was effectively split between Habsburg administration and Ottoman occupation. The prolonged minting window of over three decades reflects administrative persistence under extraordinary pressure, not prosperity. Hungary's mint infrastructure was repeatedly disrupted by the Long Turkish War and the Thököly Uprising of 1678–1685, which briefly handed significant portions of upper Hungary to anti-Habsburg rebels backed by the Porte.
The ÉH references 1110 and the dual H-numbers indicate recognized die and mint variants within this run.