Frederick I struck this gulden in 1531, the final year of his reign — he died in April 1533, but the last two years of his rule were consumed by the Count's War brewing just below the surface and a kingdom increasingly fractured by Lutheran sympathies he had quietly encouraged since the 1520s. Danish gold coinage of this period borrowed its weight standard directly from the Rhenish gulden, a deliberate signal of commercial alignment with the German trading sphere rather than any assertion of independent monetary policy.
Fr#11 is among the rarest entries in Friedberg's Northern European gold section. Surviving examples in any condition are infrequently encountered at auction.
Frederick I struck this gulden in 1531, the final year of his reign — he died in April 1533, but the last two years of his rule were consumed by the Count's War brewing just below the surface and a kingdom increasingly fractured by Lutheran sympathies he had quietly encouraged since the 1520s. Danish gold coinage of this period borrowed its weight standard directly from the Rhenish gulden, a deliberate signal of commercial alignment with the German trading sphere rather than any assertion of independent monetary policy.
Fr#11 is among the rarest entries in Friedberg's Northern European gold section. Surviving examples in any condition are infrequently encountered at auction.