Vladislav I — known also as Vlaicu Vodă — issued this ducat during a reign defined by careful navigation between Hungarian suzerainty and the growing pressure of Ottoman expansion to the south. The decision to strike silver in a denomination styled after the Venetian ducat reflects Wallachia's deep integration into the Danube trade corridor, where Hungarian and Italian commercial influence set the terms of exchange. Calling it a "ducat" in silver rather than gold was not confusion — it was a deliberate alignment with regional monetary vocabulary.
MBR#2 designates this as the first type in the series, distinguished from later issues by specific die characteristics documented by Monede și Bancnote Românești.
Vladislav I — known also as Vlaicu Vodă — issued this ducat during a reign defined by careful navigation between Hungarian suzerainty and the growing pressure of Ottoman expansion to the south. The decision to strike silver in a denomination styled after the Venetian ducat reflects Wallachia's deep integration into the Danube trade corridor, where Hungarian and Italian commercial influence set the terms of exchange. Calling it a "ducat" in silver rather than gold was not confusion — it was a deliberate alignment with regional monetary vocabulary.
MBR#2 designates this as the first type in the series, distinguished from later issues by specific die characteristics documented by Monede și Bancnote Românești.