Ferdinand III inherited an empire at war and never truly escaped it. The Thirty Years' War was in its final grinding years by 1646, with the Peace of Westphalia still two years away, and the Habsburg treasury was under relentless pressure to fund campaigns across multiple fronts. Graz, as the capital of Inner Austria, maintained its own mint with a distinct regional output — the Her#398 attribution separates this Graz production from the near-identical Vienna and Prague issues of the same reign.
The Dav EC II#3189A designation places this within a tightly defined die study. Small variations in the orb and shield arrangements across Inner Austrian thalers of this period continue to reward close examination by specialists working the Herinek reference.
Ferdinand III inherited an empire at war and never truly escaped it. The Thirty Years' War was in its final grinding years by 1646, with the Peace of Westphalia still two years away, and the Habsburg treasury was under relentless pressure to fund campaigns across multiple fronts. Graz, as the capital of Inner Austria, maintained its own mint with a distinct regional output — the Her#398 attribution separates this Graz production from the near-identical Vienna and Prague issues of the same reign.
The Dav EC II#3189A designation places this within a tightly defined die study. Small variations in the orb and shield arrangements across Inner Austrian thalers of this period continue to reward close examination by specialists working the Herinek reference.