Louis III ascended in 1848 — the same year revolution swept through the German states and forced his predecessor Ludwig II to abdicate. The kreuzer denominations kept circulating through the upheaval largely unchanged, as small copper-billon coinage rarely reflected dynastic disruption the way larger silver issues did. Hesse-Darmstadt would eventually lose its independent coinage rights entirely after siding with Austria in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, making this type among the last autonomous issues the landgraviate would produce before Prussian monetary consolidation ended local minting.
Louis III ascended in 1848 — the same year revolution swept through the German states and forced his predecessor Ludwig II to abdicate. The kreuzer denominations kept circulating through the upheaval largely unchanged, as small copper-billon coinage rarely reflected dynastic disruption the way larger silver issues did. Hesse-Darmstadt would eventually lose its independent coinage rights entirely after siding with Austria in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, making this type among the last autonomous issues the landgraviate would produce before Prussian monetary consolidation ended local minting.