Baden's billon coinage of the early 1820s emerged from a German monetary environment still deeply fragmented after the Napoleonic reorganization of the Confederation of the Rhine. The Grand Duchy itself had only been elevated to that status in 1806, and its small-denomination coinage was essentially a continuation of practical necessity — billon being the only economically viable alloy for coins that would be handled daily by the poorest segments of the population.
Louis I's reign saw Baden begin tentative negotiations toward the monetary standardization that would eventually produce the South German Gulden Convention of 1837, making these issues transitional in a precise administrative sense.
Baden's billon coinage of the early 1820s emerged from a German monetary environment still deeply fragmented after the Napoleonic reorganization of the Confederation of the Rhine. The Grand Duchy itself had only been elevated to that status in 1806, and its small-denomination coinage was essentially a continuation of practical necessity — billon being the only economically viable alloy for coins that would be handled daily by the poorest segments of the population.
Louis I's reign saw Baden begin tentative negotiations toward the monetary standardization that would eventually produce the South German Gulden Convention of 1837, making these issues transitional in a precise administrative sense.