Basel's municipal coinage of the sixteenth century occupied an awkward political position — the city joined the Swiss Confederation in 1501 yet retained enough civic independence to continue striking its own issues for decades afterward. The coexistence of Roman and Gothic lettering on a single denomination reflects a transitional scribal culture: chancellery Gothic still dominated local administrative documents while Roman humanist letterforms were pushing in from Italian-influenced printing houses established in Basel by mid-century. This wasn't decorative eclecticism — it was a mint responding, imperfectly, to two literate audiences at once.
Basel's municipal coinage of the sixteenth century occupied an awkward political position — the city joined the Swiss Confederation in 1501 yet retained enough civic independence to continue striking its own issues for decades afterward. The coexistence of Roman and Gothic lettering on a single denomination reflects a transitional scribal culture: chancellery Gothic still dominated local administrative documents while Roman humanist letterforms were pushing in from Italian-influenced printing houses established in Basel by mid-century. This wasn't decorative eclecticism — it was a mint responding, imperfectly, to two literate audiences at once.