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1 Kreutzer - Hieronymus von Colloredo

Issuer Archbishopric of Salzburg
Year 1802
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Currency Thaler
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Obverse script Latin
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Reverse description The denomination and date are rendered in bold capital letters arranged across four lines in the center of the field, reading 1 / KRE / UTZER / 1802, the word KREUTZER being split across two lines for typographic balance. A small six-petalled rosette ornament appears above the numeral 1 at the top of the field, flanked by two further rosettes, and a single rosette is placed below the date at the base, serving as decorative punctuation in lieu of a border legend.
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Hieronymus von Colloredo is remembered less for his coinage than for his bitter dispute with the Colloredo family's most famous employee — Mozart served as court musician under him until a humiliating 1781 dismissal that reportedly ended with a literal kick from the Archbishop's secretary. By 1802, Colloredo's grip on Salzburg was loosening fast; Napoleon's reorganization of German ecclesiastical territories under the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss the following year would abolish the Archbishopric as a sovereign issuing authority entirely, making this among the final copper struck under his name.

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