Catalog
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| Issuer | Haldenstein, Lordship of |
|---|---|
| Year | 1689 |
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| Reference(s) | KM#64, HMZ 2#2-539b, Divo/Tob17#1601 |
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| Reverse script | Latin |
| Reverse lettering | LEOPOLD · I · D G · ROM · IMP · S · A · 16 89 |
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| Additional information |
Haldenstein was a tiny imperial lordship in the Graubünden region of what is now eastern Switzerland, and its right to strike coin was perpetually contested by its neighbors. George Philip of Schauenstein-Ehrenfels, who held the lordship, issued coins like this one in the late seventeenth century largely as an assertion of jurisdictional independence rather than out of any economic necessity — the territory's population and trade volume barely justified a mint at all. The 1689 date places this squarely in the period of the Nine Years' War, when silver was being pulled toward military expenditure across the Empire.