Saxe-Meiningen was one of the smallest and most financially constrained of the German states, and its gold coinage was struck in genuinely limited quantities — the 10 Mark issues under Georg II total only a few thousand pieces across the entire run. The Berlin Mint handled production, as the duchy had no facility of its own.
Georg II is better remembered as a pioneering theatre director than as a sovereign, having transformed the Meiningen Court Theatre into one of the most influential ensembles in 19th-century Europe. His coins circulated through the same imperial monetary union as Prussia's, fungible in commerce but minted in numbers that guaranteed most would vanish into hoards.
Saxe-Meiningen was one of the smallest and most financially constrained of the German states, and its gold coinage was struck in genuinely limited quantities — the 10 Mark issues under Georg II total only a few thousand pieces across the entire run. The Berlin Mint handled production, as the duchy had no facility of its own.
Georg II is better remembered as a pioneering theatre director than as a sovereign, having transformed the Meiningen Court Theatre into one of the most influential ensembles in 19th-century Europe. His coins circulated through the same imperial monetary union as Prussia's, fungible in commerce but minted in numbers that guaranteed most would vanish into hoards.