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| Issuer | City of Reval |
|---|---|
| Year | 1664 |
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| Composition | Log in to see details |
| Weight | 28.47 g |
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| Obverse description | Draped and laureate bust of King Carl XI facing left, rendered in high relief with detailed drapery visible at the truncation. The effigy is enclosed within a beaded inner circle, with the royal legend arranged around the periphery of the coin. The portrait exhibits the baroque artistic style characteristic of mid-17th-century Swedish regal coinage. |
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| Reverse script | Latin |
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| Additional information |
Reval — present-day Tallinn — had been under Swedish dominion since 1561, and its civic coinage privileges were an administrative holdover that Stockholm periodically tolerated and periodically questioned. This riksdaler was struck when Carl XI was still a minor, with the regency government effectively ruling Sweden; the king himself would not assume personal rule until 1672. That the city issued silver of this weight and module under a child-king's name says more about Reval's entrenched mercantile autonomy than about any royal initiative.
KM#19 places this among the last substantive civic issues from Reval before Swedish centralization effectively ended municipal minting prerogatives in the Baltic provinces.