Reuss-Schleiz was among the smallest of the German microstates — a pocket principality in Thuringia whose ruling house numbered its princes sequentially across all male-line members, resetting only at the century mark. Henry LXII held the title from 1818 until his death in 1854, overseeing a territory of roughly 300 square kilometers. The 1850 date places this issue just two years after the revolutionary upheavals of 1848, when many German princes made significant concessions to constitutional demands before quietly walking them back.
Billon coinage of this fineness was common to the smaller states that lacked the economic weight to maintain full silver subsidiary issues on their own — many relied on shared monetary conventions with neighboring states, though Reuss-Schleiz continued issuing independently through the final years of the German pre-unification monetary patchwork.
Reuss-Schleiz was among the smallest of the German microstates — a pocket principality in Thuringia whose ruling house numbered its princes sequentially across all male-line members, resetting only at the century mark. Henry LXII held the title from 1818 until his death in 1854, overseeing a territory of roughly 300 square kilometers. The 1850 date places this issue just two years after the revolutionary upheavals of 1848, when many German princes made significant concessions to constitutional demands before quietly walking them back.
Billon coinage of this fineness was common to the smaller states that lacked the economic weight to maintain full silver subsidiary issues on their own — many relied on shared monetary conventions with neighboring states, though Reuss-Schleiz continued issuing independently through the final years of the German pre-unification monetary patchwork.