Frankfurt's groschen tournois issues of this period reflect the city's awkward position within the Holy Roman Empire's monetary chaos — nominally bound by imperial coinage ordinances (Reichsmünzordnungen) yet consistently minting to its own commercial advantage. The tournois denomination itself was a deliberate nod to the French gros tournois tradition, adopted across the Rhineland as a recognized trade unit during a period when cross-border merchant confidence in coinage was low.
The two-year window of this type is narrow enough that die marriages between 1600 and 1601 are documented under JuF#260, making die attribution worth pursuing on finer examples.
Frankfurt's groschen tournois issues of this period reflect the city's awkward position within the Holy Roman Empire's monetary chaos — nominally bound by imperial coinage ordinances (Reichsmünzordnungen) yet consistently minting to its own commercial advantage. The tournois denomination itself was a deliberate nod to the French gros tournois tradition, adopted across the Rhineland as a recognized trade unit during a period when cross-border merchant confidence in coinage was low.
The two-year window of this type is narrow enough that die marriages between 1600 and 1601 are documented under JuF#260, making die attribution worth pursuing on finer examples.