Katalog
Warum registrieren? Nur um Bots aus unserem Katalog fernzuhalten. Ihre E-Mail bleibt privat — wir geben sie nie weiter und senden Ihnen nichts Unerwünschtes. Das garantieren wir Ihnen!
| Emittent | Lübeck, Free Hanseatic city of |
|---|---|
| Jahr | 1776 |
| Typ | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Nennwert | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Währung | Thaler |
| Material | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Gewicht | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Durchmesser | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Dicke | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Form | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Prägetechnik | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Ausrichtung | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Stempelschneider | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Im Umlauf bis | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Referenz(en) | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Aversbeschreibung | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
|---|---|
| Aversschrift | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Averslegende | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Reversbeschreibung | Half-length facing figure of St. John the Evangelist holding the Lamb of God, rendered in a baroque manner characteristic of Hanseatic civic iconography. Below the saint, the shield of the mayor's arms is set within an ornate baroque cartouche. The date 1776 appears at the conclusion of the surrounding Latin legend, which identifies the coin as a new Lübeck monetary issue. |
| Reversschrift | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Reverslegende | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Rand | Lettered |
| Prägestätte | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Auflage | Anmelden um Details zu sehen |
| Zusätzliche Informationen |
Lübeck's status as a Free Imperial City gave it the right to strike its own coinage under the terms of the Holy Roman Empire's monetary constitution, a privilege the city jealously maintained even as its commercial dominance over the Baltic had long since passed to other powers. By 1776, the Hanseatic League itself was functionally dead — only Lübeck, Hamburg, and Bremen still used the name — and the city's economy had contracted sharply from its medieval peak.
The .888 fine standard aligns with the Conventions-Thaler framework that dominated German silver coinage after the 1753 monetary convention between Austria and Bavaria, which most issuing states eventually adopted.