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| Issuer | Duchy of Saxe-Altenburg |
|---|---|
| Year | 1639 |
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| Shape | Round |
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| Obverse description | Draped bust of Duke Johann Philipp right, with shoulder-length hair and beard, wearing an ornate fur-trimmed mantle with elaborate embroidery at the collar. Two allegorical putti flank the effigy in the upper field, one to the left and one to the right, holding a laurel wreath above the duke's head. The lower field features a quartered heraldic shield bearing the arms of Saxe-Altenburg. The entire composition is enclosed within a toothed border, with the Latin legend arranged peripherally. |
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| Obverse lettering | IOH. PHILIP. D. G. DVX SAX. IVL. CLIV. ET MONT. |
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| Additional information |
Johann Philipp ruled Saxe-Altenburg as part of the fractured Ernestine inheritance, a dynastic system so prone to subdivision that the Saxon duchies spent much of the seventeenth century in near-continuous renegotiation of territory. This ducat was struck in 1639, the final year of Johann Philipp's reign — he died in 1639 leaving no male heir, after which Saxe-Altenburg passed to the Saxe-Weimar line under the terms of the 1672 Altenburg partition agreements that had long anticipated exactly this outcome.
The Thirty Years' War was still grinding through its final decade when this piece was minted, and gold coinage from minor Ernestine courts of this period is genuinely scarce — fiscal pressure routinely diverted bullion to military expenditure rather than prestige coinage.