Charles II ruled Inner Austria — the hereditary lands of Styria, Carinthia, and Carniola — as a largely separate domain from the main Habsburg line in Vienna, and his Graz mint operated with considerable autonomy as a result. The 1587 date falls within the final years of his reign; he died in 1590, leaving his son Ferdinand (later Emperor Ferdinand II) to be raised by Bavarian Jesuits, a detail that would shape the entire course of the Counter-Reformation in central Europe.
The Graz mint's small-denomination silver output from this decade is frequently encountered with weak peripheral detail owing to the shallow, well-worn dies the mint habitually ran past their useful life.
Charles II ruled Inner Austria — the hereditary lands of Styria, Carinthia, and Carniola — as a largely separate domain from the main Habsburg line in Vienna, and his Graz mint operated with considerable autonomy as a result. The 1587 date falls within the final years of his reign; he died in 1590, leaving his son Ferdinand (later Emperor Ferdinand II) to be raised by Bavarian Jesuits, a detail that would shape the entire course of the Counter-Reformation in central Europe.
The Graz mint's small-denomination silver output from this decade is frequently encountered with weak peripheral detail owing to the shallow, well-worn dies the mint habitually ran past their useful life.