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1 Gulden - John Francis

Issuer Gronsveld, Lordship of
Year 1688-1693
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Technique Hammered
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Reverse description The reverse displays the large fractional denomination value '2/3' in bold numerals dominating the central field, with the date 1688 placed between the numerals in the lower portion. A small ornamental device appears above the fraction. The peripheral legend, in Latin, runs continuously around the coin bearing the issuer's subsidiary titles relating to his lordships of Battenburg, Rimburg, Alpen, and Honneppel. The lettering is engraved in a style consistent with late 17th-century German hammered coinage, and the overall design is typical of the two-thirds Thaler (Gulden) denomination common in the Holy Roman Empire during this period.
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Reverse lettering EBERST · L · B · IN · BATTENB · ET · RIMB · D · IN · ALPEN · ET · HONNEPPEL 2/3 1688
(Translation: [...] Eberstein, liberum baronum in Battenburg et Rimburg, dominuorum in Alpen et Honneppel: Eberstein, free Baron in Battenburg and Rimburg, Lord in Alpen and Humpel.)
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Additional information

Gronsveld was a tiny imperial lordship wedged between Maastricht and the Dutch border, and its coinage rights were exercised with an enthusiasm wildly disproportionate to its territorial significance. Johann Franz von Bronckhorst-Batenburg, who held the lordship through this period, issued gulden almost certainly to profit from the difference between bullion cost and face value — a practice tolerated, if barely, under the loose monetary oversight of the Holy Roman Empire. The War of the Grand Alliance was actively reshaping the region's political allegiances throughout these years, and Gronsveld's position between Spanish, Dutch, and Imperial interests made local coinage issuance both opportunistic and geopolitically precarious.

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