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1 Thaler - John Rudolph Stör of Störenberg

Issuer Imperial Abbey of Murbach and Lüders
Year 1544-1562
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Weight 28.8 g
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Reverse description Crowned double-headed imperial eagle displayed in the field, with spread wings and detailed feathering rendered in the Renaissance style. A small orb or sceptre device appears on the eagle's breast. The surrounding circular Latin legend records the imperial titles of Holy Roman Emperor Karl V (Charles V), with the date of issue incorporated into the legend.
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Reverse lettering CAROLVS·V·ROM·IMPERATOR·AUG
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Additional information

The Imperial Abbey of Murbach, founded in the Alsatian Vosges in the early eighth century, held the rank of a reichsunmittelbar institution — answerable to the Emperor alone, not to any territorial lord. John Rudolph Stör of Störenberg served as its administrator (not a consecrated abbot in the traditional sense) during a period when the abbey's temporal authority was already eroding under Protestant pressure in the surrounding region. That Murbach struck thalers at all during this window is notable; the abbey's coinage output was never prolific, and pieces attributable to Stör's administration are genuinely scarce survivors of a house already in institutional decline.

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