Hamburg's thaler coinage of the early seventeenth century was struck at a moment when the city was aggressively positioning itself as a financial hub independent of imperial monetary policy. The 1606–1607 dating reflects a two-year die usage rather than a single production run — a common practice at Hamburg where the die engravers worked under guild contract and output was tied to merchant demand rather than state schedule.
The Davenport CCT reference places this within the City Thalers series, distinguished from Hamburg's later banco-related issues that emerged after the founding of the Hamburger Bank in 1619.
Hamburg's thaler coinage of the early seventeenth century was struck at a moment when the city was aggressively positioning itself as a financial hub independent of imperial monetary policy. The 1606–1607 dating reflects a two-year die usage rather than a single production run — a common practice at Hamburg where the die engravers worked under guild contract and output was tied to merchant demand rather than state schedule.
The Davenport CCT reference places this within the City Thalers series, distinguished from Hamburg's later banco-related issues that emerged after the founding of the Hamburger Bank in 1619.