Charles I of Hesse-Cassel came to power in 1670 and proved an aggressive consolidator of territorial authority, but his lasting fiscal mark was the systematic exploitation of the landgraviate's most notorious export: soldiers. The Subsidientruppen trade with the Dutch Republic, England, and Venice was already generating substantial specie income by the mid-1680s, and gold ducats of this period almost certainly circulated as payment instruments within those subsidy transactions rather than through domestic commerce.
The .986 fineness conforms to the longstanding Rhenish ducat standard, ensuring acceptability across the Holy Roman Empire's merchant networks. Fr#1278 is a relatively thinly documented entry in Friedberg.
Charles I of Hesse-Cassel came to power in 1670 and proved an aggressive consolidator of territorial authority, but his lasting fiscal mark was the systematic exploitation of the landgraviate's most notorious export: soldiers. The Subsidientruppen trade with the Dutch Republic, England, and Venice was already generating substantial specie income by the mid-1680s, and gold ducats of this period almost certainly circulated as payment instruments within those subsidy transactions rather than through domestic commerce.
The .986 fineness conforms to the longstanding Rhenish ducat standard, ensuring acceptability across the Holy Roman Empire's merchant networks. Fr#1278 is a relatively thinly documented entry in Friedberg.