Henneberg-Schleusingen sat at the intersection of competing dynastic pressures throughout the sixteenth century, with George Ernest ruling as the last of his line — a count who outlived all his heirs and eventually ceded the county to Saxony in 1583 upon his death. These thalers were struck during a relatively narrow window when the county still operated its own mint with some autonomy, before the administrative absorption that effectively ended independent Henneberg coinage.
The Davenport reference grouping under GT I reflects the transitional nature of the issue across the three-year span, with minor die variations documented between strikes.
Henneberg-Schleusingen sat at the intersection of competing dynastic pressures throughout the sixteenth century, with George Ernest ruling as the last of his line — a count who outlived all his heirs and eventually ceded the county to Saxony in 1583 upon his death. These thalers were struck during a relatively narrow window when the county still operated its own mint with some autonomy, before the administrative absorption that effectively ended independent Henneberg coinage.
The Davenport reference grouping under GT I reflects the transitional nature of the issue across the three-year span, with minor die variations documented between strikes.