Louis VIII ruled Hesse-Darmstadt from 1739 until his death in 1768, presiding over a financially strained landgraviate that leaned heavily on subsidiary coinage to manage day-to-day commerce. The 12 Kreuzer denomination — a Scheidemünze rather than a full-value coin — was produced with silver content calibrated well below face value, a common fiscal expedient among the smaller German states during the mid-eighteenth century.
The Seven Years' War, which engulfed the Holy Roman Empire from 1756, placed extraordinary pressure on Hessian minting operations. Hesse-Darmstadt, unlike its neighbor Hesse-Kassel, lacked the subsidy income from hiring out troops to the British, leaving the Darmstadt court to stretch its metal supplies further.
Louis VIII ruled Hesse-Darmstadt from 1739 until his death in 1768, presiding over a financially strained landgraviate that leaned heavily on subsidiary coinage to manage day-to-day commerce. The 12 Kreuzer denomination — a Scheidemünze rather than a full-value coin — was produced with silver content calibrated well below face value, a common fiscal expedient among the smaller German states during the mid-eighteenth century.
The Seven Years' War, which engulfed the Holy Roman Empire from 1756, placed extraordinary pressure on Hessian minting operations. Hesse-Darmstadt, unlike its neighbor Hesse-Kassel, lacked the subsidy income from hiring out troops to the British, leaving the Darmstadt court to stretch its metal supplies further.