Lübeck's ducats of this period were struck under the city's authority as a nominally independent imperial free city, a status increasingly under pressure as the Holy Roman Empire entered its terminal decades. The city had maintained its own coinage rights jealously since the medieval period, and the ducat — struck to the long-established Venetian weight standard — was its principal instrument of international mercantile exchange, essential for Baltic trade settlements where foreign merchants would accept little else.
Fr#1500 is among the scarcer Lübeck gold issues of the late 18th century, with surviving examples showing inconsistent die preparation typical of a mint operating at modest volume.
Lübeck's ducats of this period were struck under the city's authority as a nominally independent imperial free city, a status increasingly under pressure as the Holy Roman Empire entered its terminal decades. The city had maintained its own coinage rights jealously since the medieval period, and the ducat — struck to the long-established Venetian weight standard — was its principal instrument of international mercantile exchange, essential for Baltic trade settlements where foreign merchants would accept little else.
Fr#1500 is among the scarcer Lübeck gold issues of the late 18th century, with surviving examples showing inconsistent die preparation typical of a mint operating at modest volume.