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| 正面铭文 | 17 34 |
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| 铸造量 | 1715 - - 1718 - - 1719 - - 1721 - - 1722 - - 1723 - - 1726 - - 1728 - - 1729 - - 1730 - - 1731 - - 1733 - - 1734 - Small Pine cone - 1735 - - 1736 - - 1737 - - 1738 - Large Pine cone - 1739 - - 1740 - - |
| 附加信息 |
Augsburg's heller coinage of this period occupied the lowest tier of the Holy Roman Empire's chaotic small-change ecosystem, where municipal copper issues circulated alongside a bewildering variety of other city-state pfennigs and hellers with no guaranteed acceptance beyond local markets. Free imperial cities like Augsburg retained the right to strike their own copper under imperial privilege, a right jealously defended even as the economic rationale for fractional copper grew increasingly thin through the early eighteenth century.
KM#128 spans a production window of roughly 25 years, suggesting intermittent rather than continuous striking — typical of municipal copper issued to address short-term small-change shortages rather than satisfy ongoing demand.