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3 Pfennig - Charles I Kipper

Issuer Teutonic Order
Year 1622
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Currency Thaler (1525-1809)
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Obverse script Latin
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Reverse description Roman numeral III rendered in bold characters at center, enclosed within a laurel wreath composed of leafy branches tied at the base and adorned with small rosette or star ornaments at intervals. The wreath and numeral are surrounded by a beaded border.
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Additional information

The Kipper und Wipper crisis of 1619–1623 was one of the most disastrous currency debasements in early modern European history, driven by small states and institutions frantically minting debased coinage to pay obligations — then passing the bad money across borders before the collapse arrived. The Teutonic Order, administratively centered at Mergentheim by this period, participated directly. Charles I, as Grand Master, authorized copper issues that would have been unthinkable a generation earlier for an institution that had long maintained silver standards.

The KM#54 attribution places this squarely within the Order's Kipper-period emergency output.

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