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| 背面描述 | Saint George mounted on a horse prancing to the right, depicted in full armor with lance in hand, slaying a dragon writhing beneath the horse's hooves. The composition is rendered in a bold, late Renaissance style characteristic of late 16th-century German coinage. The encircling Latin legend, which continues the titulature of the issuing counts, commences with a small imperial orb serving as a punctuation device at the beginning of the inscription. |
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| 铸造量 | 1597 - - 1598 - - |
| 附加信息 |
Mansfeld was one of the most copper- and silver-rich counties in the Holy Roman Empire, and by the 1590s it was also one of the most financially ruined. Decades of joint inheritance among competing lines of the Schiefer family had fragmented the county into overlapping sub-jurisdictions, each with nominal coinage rights. This piece names all four reigning counts of the Friedeburg line simultaneously — not as ceremony, but as legal necessity, since any coin issued without all co-rulers' authority was challengeable under imperial law.
The Friedeburg branch was bankrupt within a generation. Mansfeld's mining output had peaked; the debts had not.