The Fugger banking dynasty received the right to strike coins at Babenhausen as a direct consequence of their financial entanglements with the Habsburg court — essentially a privilege extracted in partial settlement of debts the emperors could not repay in cash. By 1622, the Thirty Years' War was consuming imperial finances at a catastrophic rate, and minor lordships like Fugger-Babenhausen were among the few creditors still liquid enough to mint in gold.
This is a rare county-level ducat from a house better known for ledgers than dies. Fugger coinage in gold from this period surfaces infrequently at auction.
The Fugger banking dynasty received the right to strike coins at Babenhausen as a direct consequence of their financial entanglements with the Habsburg court — essentially a privilege extracted in partial settlement of debts the emperors could not repay in cash. By 1622, the Thirty Years' War was consuming imperial finances at a catastrophic rate, and minor lordships like Fugger-Babenhausen were among the few creditors still liquid enough to mint in gold.
This is a rare county-level ducat from a house better known for ledgers than dies. Fugger coinage in gold from this period surfaces infrequently at auction.