Maria Theresa's Hungarian 3 Kreuzer series of this period was struck at the Kremnitz (Körmöcbánya) mint, one of the longest-continuously-operating mints in European history, drawing on the rich silver deposits of the Carpathian ore belt that had made the Kingdom of Hungary a monetary engine for the Habsburgs since the medieval period. The coinage was part of her broader monetary rationalization following the Seven Years' War, which had left Habsburg finances badly strained and prompted a series of currency reforms across the hereditary lands throughout the 1760s.
Kremnitz-struck pieces from this reign frequently show uneven planchet preparation — a known characteristic, not a strike weakness — owing to the rolling mill technology in use at that facility during these specific years.
Maria Theresa's Hungarian 3 Kreuzer series of this period was struck at the Kremnitz (Körmöcbánya) mint, one of the longest-continuously-operating mints in European history, drawing on the rich silver deposits of the Carpathian ore belt that had made the Kingdom of Hungary a monetary engine for the Habsburgs since the medieval period. The coinage was part of her broader monetary rationalization following the Seven Years' War, which had left Habsburg finances badly strained and prompted a series of currency reforms across the hereditary lands throughout the 1760s.
Kremnitz-struck pieces from this reign frequently show uneven planchet preparation — a known characteristic, not a strike weakness — owing to the rolling mill technology in use at that facility during these specific years.