Frederick William Leopold ruled Lippe from 1782 until his death in 1800, a period during which the tiny principality — wedged between Prussian and Hanoverian territory — maintained its minting rights largely as a matter of dynastic prestige rather than economic necessity. The billon mattier was among the smallest denominations struck under his authority, circulating among a population that rarely handled anything larger in daily transactions.
KM#210 is not a heavily documented type, and surviving examples tend to show circulation wear consistent with actual use rather than cabinet storage.
Frederick William Leopold ruled Lippe from 1782 until his death in 1800, a period during which the tiny principality — wedged between Prussian and Hanoverian territory — maintained its minting rights largely as a matter of dynastic prestige rather than economic necessity. The billon mattier was among the smallest denominations struck under his authority, circulating among a population that rarely handled anything larger in daily transactions.
KM#210 is not a heavily documented type, and surviving examples tend to show circulation wear consistent with actual use rather than cabinet storage.