Philip Julius, Duke of Pomerania-Wolgast, died in February 1625 as the last male of his line, extinguishing the Wolgast branch and setting off a succession dispute that would eventually draw Swedish forces deeper into Pomeranian politics — a process accelerated catastrophically by the Thirty Years' War already tearing through the region. Death thalers of this type were memorial issues struck explicitly to mark a dynastic end, not circulated currency, which explains the survival rate in presentable condition relative to the mintage.
Philip Julius, Duke of Pomerania-Wolgast, died in February 1625 as the last male of his line, extinguishing the Wolgast branch and setting off a succession dispute that would eventually draw Swedish forces deeper into Pomeranian politics — a process accelerated catastrophically by the Thirty Years' War already tearing through the region. Death thalers of this type were memorial issues struck explicitly to mark a dynastic end, not circulated currency, which explains the survival rate in presentable condition relative to the mintage.