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1 Tumeler

Issuer Goslar, City of
Year 1503
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Value 1 Tumeler = 1/2 Groschen (1⁄48)
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Obverse script Latin (uncial)
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Reverse description A bold fourfold cross with split or cleft ends, sometimes described as a cross patée variant, centered in the field and enclosed within a beaded inner circle. The cross arms extend nearly to the inner circle, dividing the field into four quadrants. A circular legend in Gothic uncial lettering runs along the outer margin, consistent with the municipal coinage conventions of Goslar in the early sixteenth century.
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Additional information

Goslar's mining wealth from the Rammelsberg ore deposit — one of the most productive silver sources in medieval Europe — meant the city could sustain its own coinage long after many comparable free imperial cities had ceded minting rights. The Tumeler denomination itself was a regional small silver peculiar to the northwestern German minting sphere, and by 1503 Goslar was among its last consistent producers.

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