Joseph Adam of Schwarzenberg issued this multiple-ducat piece in 1741, the year he formally assumed control of the principality following years of administration under guardianship. Large gold multiples of this kind were not struck for circulation — they functioned as presentation pieces, distributed at court ceremonies, diplomatic occasions, and to mark the consolidation of dynastic authority within the Holy Roman Empire's complex hierarchy of mediate and immediate princes.
Schwarzenberg held the rare status of an immediate principality, answering directly to the Emperor rather than through an intermediary territorial lord. Pieces like this one were part of how that standing was performed and communicated.
Joseph Adam of Schwarzenberg issued this multiple-ducat piece in 1741, the year he formally assumed control of the principality following years of administration under guardianship. Large gold multiples of this kind were not struck for circulation — they functioned as presentation pieces, distributed at court ceremonies, diplomatic occasions, and to mark the consolidation of dynastic authority within the Holy Roman Empire's complex hierarchy of mediate and immediate princes.
Schwarzenberg held the rare status of an immediate principality, answering directly to the Emperor rather than through an intermediary territorial lord. Pieces like this one were part of how that standing was performed and communicated.