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| Issuer | Saxe-Eisenberg, Duchy of |
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| Year | 1682 |
| Type | Standard circulation coin |
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| Obverse description | Facing armored bust of Duke Christian, rendered in high relief with long flowing curled wig characteristic of late 17th-century baroque portraiture. The effigy is draped in ornate plate armor with detailed engraving, centered within a beaded inner circle. The surrounding legend reads CHRISTIANUS D.G. DUX SAX. IUL. CLIV. ET MONT., identifying the ruler by name and title in Latin. The portrait is finely executed with naturalistic facial features and displays the dignified, formal style typical of German ducal coinage of the period. |
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| Reverse lettering | 1682 DEO — PROTECTORI — MEO |
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| Additional information |
Saxe-Eisenberg was one of the smallest and most short-lived of the Ernestine Saxon duchies, carved out in 1680 when Duke Christian divided his holdings among his sons. Christian himself ruled Eisenberg for only a matter of years before the line collapsed back into the broader Ernestine inheritance — which makes any coinage struck in his name a product of an exceptionally narrow window. Ducats from minor Ernestine courts of this period were largely prestige pieces, circulating among diplomats and courts rather than in local commerce.