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4 Pfennig - Frederick August I

Issuer Kingdom of Saxony
Year 1808-1810
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Shape Round
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Obverse description Central field displays the crowned Saxon arms — the barry-of-ten shield charged with a bend engrailed — rendered in fine relief and flanked on either side by symmetrical sprays of grain or palm fronds whose tips meet below the shield, forming a wreath-like surround. A royal crown with cross finial surmounts the escutcheon. The plain, unlegended field directs full attention to the heraldic device, presenting the arms in a bold, neoclassical style characteristic of early 19th-century Saxon coinage.
Obverse script Latin
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Saxony's adoption of a reorganized copper coinage in 1806–1808 came directly in the wake of Napoleon's restructuring of German territories following Jena. Frederick August III — elevated to King Frederick August I by Napoleon in December 1806 as reward for switching sides — needed a coinage that reflected his new royal dignity. The brief window of 1808–1810 for this type makes surviving examples relatively scarce in any grade.

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