Catalog
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| Issuer | Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Principality of |
|---|---|
| Year | 1691-1699 |
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| Diameter | 43 mm |
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| Obverse description | Ornate quartered coat of arms of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel displayed on a baroque cartouche with elaborate scrollwork mantling to either side. Above the shield, a row of five crested helmets bearing the dynastic helm-crests of the principality, including lions, a peacock, and other heraldic charges. The circular Latin legend reads: D·G·RVD·AVG·&·ANTH·VLR·D·D·BR·&·L· |
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| Obverse lettering | D·G·RVD·AVG·&·ANTH·VLR·D·D·BR·&·L· |
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| Additional information |
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel operated under dual rulership from 1685, when Anthony Ulrich joined his elder brother Rudolph August as co-regent — an arrangement born less from political necessity than from Rudolph August's genuine preference for delegating governance. The elder brother retained nominal seniority but effectively withdrew from active rule, leaving Anthony Ulrich, an accomplished poet and novelist, to manage both the court and its affairs. Joint-reign thalers of this type were struck across multiple years through the Zellerfeld mint, and the series spans enough dies and minor variants that Welter's cataloguing remains the essential reference for separating them.