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| 背面描述 | The reverse field is dominated by a bold three-line inscription in serif capital letters reading SEGEN DES / MANSFELDER / BERGBAUES, commemorating the blessing of the Mansfeld mining industry. The circular legend running along the dentilated rim gives the denomination and fineness standard: EIN THALER XXX EIN PFUND FEIN, with the date 1857 prominently placed in the lower exergue. The plain field surrounding the central text inscription gives the design a stark, monumental character typical of German mining thalers of this period. |
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| 背面铭文 | EIN THALER XXX EIN PFUND FEIN SEGEN DES MANSFELDER BERGBAUES 1857 |
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| 附加信息 |
Prussia's "Mining Thaler" was issued to honor the kingdom's substantial silver mining interests in the Harz and Silesian regions, where state-controlled operations supplied much of the raw metal used by the Berlin and Breslau mints. Frederick William IV, by the late 1850s increasingly incapacitated by a series of strokes that would lead to his brother Wilhelm assuming the regency in 1858, lent his portrait to a coin he likely never formally approved in his final lucid state.
The four-year window of production coincides almost exactly with the transition of Prussian authority from Frederick William to the future Kaiser Wilhelm I.