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| 背面描述 | Crowned coat of arms of the Duchy of Friedland occupying the central field, featuring the Imperial double-headed eagle displayed, its wings spread, with a quartered escutcheon on the breast bearing the Wallenstein arms. The shield is surmounted by a princely crown. The date appears to the left of the crown within the field. The circumferential Latin legend, reading SAC . RO . IM. (3) PRINC . 1627, denotes Wallenstein's title as Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, separated by ornamental stops, and the denomination numeral 3 is incorporated within the legend. |
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| 边缘 | Plain |
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| 附加信息 |
Wallenstein received the Duchy of Friedland from Emperor Ferdinand II as direct payment for his military services — a feudal transaction that gave him sovereign minting rights he exercised aggressively between 1627 and 1628. His mint at Gitschin operated under considerable pressure, supplying coin to fund an army that at its peak numbered over 100,000 men, largely self-financed through Wallenstein's own territorial revenues and war contributions extracted from occupied lands.
The minting privilege was extinguished when Ferdinand had Wallenstein assassinated at Eger in February 1634, making the entire Friedland coinage a product of fewer than seven years of existence.