Pattern strikes for routine circulation denominations like the 1 Kreuzer were occasionally produced in precious metals as presentation pieces for ruling house members or high officials — not for monetary use. Frederick I had assumed full sovereignty over Baden only in 1856 after the regency of his mother, and the early 1860s saw a flurry of such presentation coinage as the young grand duke consolidated his court's ceremonial apparatus. At 7.08 grams in .900 gold, the metal value alone vastly exceeded the face value of a single Kreuzer, making the political theater of the object entirely the point.
Pattern strikes for routine circulation denominations like the 1 Kreuzer were occasionally produced in precious metals as presentation pieces for ruling house members or high officials — not for monetary use. Frederick I had assumed full sovereignty over Baden only in 1856 after the regency of his mother, and the early 1860s saw a flurry of such presentation coinage as the young grand duke consolidated his court's ceremonial apparatus. At 7.08 grams in .900 gold, the metal value alone vastly exceeded the face value of a single Kreuzer, making the political theater of the object entirely the point.