Hamburg's 1½ Thaler denomination was a creature of commercial necessity, not monetary convention. The city's dominant role in Baltic and North Sea trade during the early seventeenth century created demand for large-denomination silver suited to wholesale settlement, and fractional thaler multiples allowed merchants to match payment sums without resorting to inconvenient coin counts. The Gaedechens reference places this among a tight cluster of Hamburg multiple thalers sharing the same broad production window, struck as the city navigated the opening pressures that would eventually detonate into the Thirty Years' War in 1618.
Hamburg established its Banco di Hamburg in 1619 — the final year of this issue's production run — precisely to stabilize the chaotic mix of degraded coinage flooding the city's exchanges.
Hamburg's 1½ Thaler denomination was a creature of commercial necessity, not monetary convention. The city's dominant role in Baltic and North Sea trade during the early seventeenth century created demand for large-denomination silver suited to wholesale settlement, and fractional thaler multiples allowed merchants to match payment sums without resorting to inconvenient coin counts. The Gaedechens reference places this among a tight cluster of Hamburg multiple thalers sharing the same broad production window, struck as the city navigated the opening pressures that would eventually detonate into the Thirty Years' War in 1618.
Hamburg established its Banco di Hamburg in 1619 — the final year of this issue's production run — precisely to stabilize the chaotic mix of degraded coinage flooding the city's exchanges.