The 32 Schilling denomination was a peculiarity of the north German Schilling-based currency system, a parallel accounting structure that persisted in Mecklenburg long after neighboring states had rationalized their coinage. Frederick Francis I had assumed the ducal title only in 1785, inheriting a territory financially strained by the costs of the Seven Years' War and subsequent dynastic obligations. By 1797, with the Revolutionary Wars destabilizing currency flows across the Holy Roman Empire, maintaining a credible silver coinage was as much a political signal as an economic one.
The J#18b designation indicates a variant within Jaeger's north German series — worth cross-referencing against Kunzel#368 for die specifics.
The 32 Schilling denomination was a peculiarity of the north German Schilling-based currency system, a parallel accounting structure that persisted in Mecklenburg long after neighboring states had rationalized their coinage. Frederick Francis I had assumed the ducal title only in 1785, inheriting a territory financially strained by the costs of the Seven Years' War and subsequent dynastic obligations. By 1797, with the Revolutionary Wars destabilizing currency flows across the Holy Roman Empire, maintaining a credible silver coinage was as much a political signal as an economic one.
The J#18b designation indicates a variant within Jaeger's north German series — worth cross-referencing against Kunzel#368 for die specifics.