Anthony III of Montfort-Peggau ruled a minuscule Swabian county whose coinage rights were perpetually contested by neighboring Imperial authorities. By 1702, billon kreuzer production among the smaller German territorial lords was already an anachronism — most such counties had surrendered minting privileges or simply stopped exercising them. That Montfort-Peggau struck at all this late makes KM#100 an outlier, and surviving examples in any condition are genuinely scarce in the specialist market for small German states.
Anthony III of Montfort-Peggau ruled a minuscule Swabian county whose coinage rights were perpetually contested by neighboring Imperial authorities. By 1702, billon kreuzer production among the smaller German territorial lords was already an anachronism — most such counties had surrendered minting privileges or simply stopped exercising them. That Montfort-Peggau struck at all this late makes KM#100 an outlier, and surviving examples in any condition are genuinely scarce in the specialist market for small German states.