Stephen II ruled Moldavia during one of its most fractured periods of succession — he acceded in 1433 but faced repeated challenges from rival claimants, and his reign was effectively interrupted before its final end in 1447. The Type V classification within his groschen sequence reflects die evolution across a long and unstable issue rather than any single administrative decision. Moldavian groschens of this period circulated alongside Polish and Lithuanian currency throughout the region, a consequence of Moldavia's position as a tributary vassal state oscillating between competing Jagiellonian and Ottoman pressures.
Stephen II ruled Moldavia during one of its most fractured periods of succession — he acceded in 1433 but faced repeated challenges from rival claimants, and his reign was effectively interrupted before its final end in 1447. The Type V classification within his groschen sequence reflects die evolution across a long and unstable issue rather than any single administrative decision. Moldavian groschens of this period circulated alongside Polish and Lithuanian currency throughout the region, a consequence of Moldavia's position as a tributary vassal state oscillating between competing Jagiellonian and Ottoman pressures.