Ferdinand II's double thalers from this period fall squarely within the Kipper und Wipperzeit aftermath — the currency debasement crisis of 1619–1623 that had flooded Central Europe with underweight small coinage and destroyed public trust in money. The large-denomination silver pieces struck at Vienna in the years following were partly a deliberate reassertion of Habsburg monetary credibility, issued as the Emperor was simultaneously fighting the Bohemian revolt and pressing his counter-reformation agenda across the Empire.
Her#296–303 spans at least eight documented die combinations for this type, a range that reflects sustained Vienna mint production across eleven years rather than a single campaign strike.
Ferdinand II's double thalers from this period fall squarely within the Kipper und Wipperzeit aftermath — the currency debasement crisis of 1619–1623 that had flooded Central Europe with underweight small coinage and destroyed public trust in money. The large-denomination silver pieces struck at Vienna in the years following were partly a deliberate reassertion of Habsburg monetary credibility, issued as the Emperor was simultaneously fighting the Bohemian revolt and pressing his counter-reformation agenda across the Empire.
Her#296–303 spans at least eight documented die combinations for this type, a range that reflects sustained Vienna mint production across eleven years rather than a single campaign strike.