Knut I's reign saw Sweden operating without a centralized mint in any modern sense — coins were struck by regional ecclesiastical and secular authorities under loose royal sanction, which accounts for the considerable die variation catalogued under this type. The Lagerqvist 1A:7c designation places this piece within a recognized sub-group distinguished by specific die characteristics, not simply a generic assignment.
Sweden's bracteate-influenced penning coinage of the twelfth century was tied directly to periodic recoinage demands, where old coins were called in and exchanged at a loss — a form of implicit taxation that funded royal and ecclesiastical projects alike.
Knut I's reign saw Sweden operating without a centralized mint in any modern sense — coins were struck by regional ecclesiastical and secular authorities under loose royal sanction, which accounts for the considerable die variation catalogued under this type. The Lagerqvist 1A:7c designation places this piece within a recognized sub-group distinguished by specific die characteristics, not simply a generic assignment.
Sweden's bracteate-influenced penning coinage of the twelfth century was tied directly to periodic recoinage demands, where old coins were called in and exchanged at a loss — a form of implicit taxation that funded royal and ecclesiastical projects alike.