The joint coinage of Deventer, Kampen, and Zwolle — the IJssel cities — was a pragmatic response to chronic small-change shortages in the Low Countries. These three Overijssel cities held imperial city status under Charles V and periodically exercised their minting rights in concert rather than individually. The 1556 date places this piece in the final years of Charles V's reign before his abdication.
Copper plakken from this alliance are notoriously difficult to attribute without the CNM reference to hand — the three cities used sufficiently similar iconographic conventions that worn examples have historically been miscatalogued.
The joint coinage of Deventer, Kampen, and Zwolle — the IJssel cities — was a pragmatic response to chronic small-change shortages in the Low Countries. These three Overijssel cities held imperial city status under Charles V and periodically exercised their minting rights in concert rather than individually. The 1556 date places this piece in the final years of Charles V's reign before his abdication.
Copper plakken from this alliance are notoriously difficult to attribute without the CNM reference to hand — the three cities used sufficiently similar iconographic conventions that worn examples have historically been miscatalogued.