Christian VIII's reign saw Denmark clinging to a monetary system already under strain from the Napoleonic Wars' aftermath, when state bankruptcy in 1813 had gutted confidence in Danish currency for a generation. The dual denomination — rigsbankskilling and schilling courant simultaneously — reflects the administrative awkwardness of governing a kingdom that still included the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein, where different accounting traditions ran parallel to Copenhagen's.
The short two-year production window likely reflects the broader monetary rationalization underway before the 1854 speciedaler reforms rather than any minting disruption.
Christian VIII's reign saw Denmark clinging to a monetary system already under strain from the Napoleonic Wars' aftermath, when state bankruptcy in 1813 had gutted confidence in Danish currency for a generation. The dual denomination — rigsbankskilling and schilling courant simultaneously — reflects the administrative awkwardness of governing a kingdom that still included the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein, where different accounting traditions ran parallel to Copenhagen's.
The short two-year production window likely reflects the broader monetary rationalization underway before the 1854 speciedaler reforms rather than any minting disruption.