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| 裏面の説明 | Densely composed field depicting a triumphant battle scene in high relief: Maximilian I, armoured and helmeted, stands astride fallen enemies amid a tumult of combatants, weapons, and armour. An imperial eagle-bearing shield is prominently displayed in the upper left, while a cluster of heraldic shields representing the Habsburg dynastic territories fills the lower portion of the field. The overall composition conveys imperial victory and dominion over multiple realms. A continuous Latin legend in Gothic lettering encircles the design within a beaded border: + PLVRIVMQVE • EVROPAE • PROVINCIARVM • REX • ET • PRINCEPS • POTENTISSIMVS. |
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| 鋳造所 | ログイン して詳細を見る |
| 鋳造数 | 1514 |
| 追加情報 |
The Guldiner — of which this is among the earliest substantial examples — was the coin type that directly prefigured the thaler, the denomination that would eventually lend its name to the dollar. Maximilian I was instrumental in standardizing large-format silver coinage across Habsburg territories, and the Hall Mint in Tyrol, fed by the silver output of the Schwaz mines, was his primary vehicle for doing so. Schwaz was at that moment the largest silver-producing operation in Europe, employing upward of ten thousand workers at its peak.
Vogelhuber 17 places this among the documented 1514 Hall emissions, a year in which Maximilian was pressing hard to finance campaigns against Venice.