Catalog
| Issuer | Frankfurt, Free imperial city of |
|---|---|
| Year | 1378-1400 |
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| Composition | Silver |
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| Diameter | Log in to see details |
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| Obverse description | Frankfurt civic eagle displayed in the field, wings spread, head turned to the left. The bird is rendered in a bold, simplified late-medieval style characteristic of hammered bracteate-influenced coinage. No legend or border is present, the entire flan being occupied by the heraldic device. The irregular flan edge and uneven surface are typical of hand-hammered production of the period. |
|---|---|
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| Edge | Plain |
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| Additional information |
Frankfurt's heller coinage of this period occupied an awkward monetary position — too small for serious commerce, too silver to ignore. The heller denomination itself originated in Schwäbisch Hall, where it was struck from the early thirteenth century before spreading across the Holy Roman Empire as a common fractional unit. By Frankfurt's adoption, the type had already been debased and reimagined dozens of times by different issuing authorities, each adjusting fineness to local economic pressures.
The late fourteenth century was a particularly turbulent period for Frankfurt's civic finances, with the city navigating the aftermath of the Black Death's labor disruptions and ongoing tension with the surrounding imperial nobility over toll rights on the Main.