Christian VII was nominally king throughout this period, but the coins bearing his name were issued under the effective rule of others — first his stepmother's faction, then from 1784 onward, his son the Crown Prince Frederik, who staged a bloodless palace coup and governed as regent while Christian's mental incapacity deepened. The "Species" designation distinguishes this ducat as trade-weight coinage intended for commerce beyond Danish borders, particularly in the Baltic and Levantine markets where Danish merchant shipping was active.
The .979 fineness is notably high even by ducat standards, tracking the traditional Dutch and German benchmark that made the denomination trusted across European trade routes for centuries.
Christian VII was nominally king throughout this period, but the coins bearing his name were issued under the effective rule of others — first his stepmother's faction, then from 1784 onward, his son the Crown Prince Frederik, who staged a bloodless palace coup and governed as regent while Christian's mental incapacity deepened. The "Species" designation distinguishes this ducat as trade-weight coinage intended for commerce beyond Danish borders, particularly in the Baltic and Levantine markets where Danish merchant shipping was active.
The .979 fineness is notably high even by ducat standards, tracking the traditional Dutch and German benchmark that made the denomination trusted across European trade routes for centuries.