Christian Ernest inherited the Margraviate of Brandenburg-Bayreuth in 1661 at age sixteen, and the early thalers struck under his name reflect the administrative ambitions of a minor Hohenzollern branch eager to assert parity with grander German courts. Brandenburg-Bayreuth occupied an awkward position — nominally under the broader Hohenzollern umbrella yet fiercely protective of its own mint rights and ceremonial coinage.
The Davenport reference ST#6272 places this piece within the broader Franconian thaler tradition, where die-cutting quality varied considerably between contracted engravers.
Christian Ernest inherited the Margraviate of Brandenburg-Bayreuth in 1661 at age sixteen, and the early thalers struck under his name reflect the administrative ambitions of a minor Hohenzollern branch eager to assert parity with grander German courts. Brandenburg-Bayreuth occupied an awkward position — nominally under the broader Hohenzollern umbrella yet fiercely protective of its own mint rights and ceremonial coinage.
The Davenport reference ST#6272 places this piece within the broader Franconian thaler tradition, where die-cutting quality varied considerably between contracted engravers.