John Louis (Johann Ludwig) ruled Solms-Hohensolms during a period when the fragmented coinage rights of the smaller German territories were increasingly contested by neighboring powers and the imperial administration. Tiny copper pfennigs of this type were struck by scores of minor counts exercising Münzrecht — the inherited right to coin — even as imperial edicts repeatedly attempted to curtail small-denomination issues from territories too minor to maintain consistent standards. At 0.17g, this piece sits at the absolute lower threshold of practical coinage, and contemporary complaints about underweight pfennigs from petty counties were a recurring feature of late 17th-century imperial diet proceedings.
John Louis (Johann Ludwig) ruled Solms-Hohensolms during a period when the fragmented coinage rights of the smaller German territories were increasingly contested by neighboring powers and the imperial administration. Tiny copper pfennigs of this type were struck by scores of minor counts exercising Münzrecht — the inherited right to coin — even as imperial edicts repeatedly attempted to curtail small-denomination issues from territories too minor to maintain consistent standards. At 0.17g, this piece sits at the absolute lower threshold of practical coinage, and contemporary complaints about underweight pfennigs from petty counties were a recurring feature of late 17th-century imperial diet proceedings.