The 18 Gröscher was a distinctly Prussian denomination, issued for use in the eastern territories where Gröschen-based reckoning remained entrenched long after Thaler coinage dominated the west. Frederick II's Silesian and Seven Years' War campaigns placed enormous strain on the royal treasury, and the Königsberg mint — geographically isolated in East Prussia — operated under standing orders to maximize silver output. The 1752 date places this piece squarely in the interwar buildup, before the outbreak of the Seven Years' War in 1756.
Königsberg issues of this type are known for slightly variable die alignment, a consequence of the mint's relative distance from centralized supervisory oversight in Berlin.
The 18 Gröscher was a distinctly Prussian denomination, issued for use in the eastern territories where Gröschen-based reckoning remained entrenched long after Thaler coinage dominated the west. Frederick II's Silesian and Seven Years' War campaigns placed enormous strain on the royal treasury, and the Königsberg mint — geographically isolated in East Prussia — operated under standing orders to maximize silver output. The 1752 date places this piece squarely in the interwar buildup, before the outbreak of the Seven Years' War in 1756.
Königsberg issues of this type are known for slightly variable die alignment, a consequence of the mint's relative distance from centralized supervisory oversight in Berlin.