Warendorf, a Westphalian linen-trading town, held municipal minting rights intermittently through the sixteenth century — a privilege jealously guarded by small German cities as a source of seigniorage income and local economic control. The heller denomination was among the smallest in everyday circulation, used primarily for petty market transactions in grain and textile trade. Most examples from this period circulated hard and were melted or lost within decades.
MB#1 suggests this is the earliest catalogued issue from the city, which makes surviving specimens genuinely scarce in any condition.
Warendorf, a Westphalian linen-trading town, held municipal minting rights intermittently through the sixteenth century — a privilege jealously guarded by small German cities as a source of seigniorage income and local economic control. The heller denomination was among the smallest in everyday circulation, used primarily for petty market transactions in grain and textile trade. Most examples from this period circulated hard and were melted or lost within decades.
MB#1 suggests this is the earliest catalogued issue from the city, which makes surviving specimens genuinely scarce in any condition.