Charles XI was thirteen years old when this coin was struck, with Sweden still governed by a regency council following the death of Charles X Gustav in 1660. The regency period was marked by aristocratic mismanagement of crown finances severe enough that it later triggered a formal commission of inquiry — the so-called reduktion proceedings of the 1680s, through which Charles XI eventually reclaimed alienated crown lands and dismantled the council nobility's grip on the state.
The .694 fineness reflects a deliberate reduction from earlier Swedish silver standards, a quiet adjustment that stretched bullion reserves during a period of chronic fiscal strain.
Charles XI was thirteen years old when this coin was struck, with Sweden still governed by a regency council following the death of Charles X Gustav in 1660. The regency period was marked by aristocratic mismanagement of crown finances severe enough that it later triggered a formal commission of inquiry — the so-called reduktion proceedings of the 1680s, through which Charles XI eventually reclaimed alienated crown lands and dismantled the council nobility's grip on the state.
The .694 fineness reflects a deliberate reduction from earlier Swedish silver standards, a quiet adjustment that stretched bullion reserves during a period of chronic fiscal strain.