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| Issuer | Brandenburg-Prussia Mint (German States) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1676-1687 |
| Type | Standard circulation coin |
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| Obverse description | Central field features the crowned royal cypher of Elector Frederick William of Brandenburg, rendered as an ornate interlaced monogram surmounted by an Electoral crown. The cypher is flanked on either side by the mint official's initials, positioned in the field to the left and right of the central device. The design is unadorned by a surrounding legend, with the entire composition occupying the coin's face in a bold, somewhat rustic hammered style characteristic of 17th-century German billon coinage. |
|---|---|
| Obverse script | Latin |
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| Additional information |
Frederick William, the Great Elector, spent much of his reign rebuilding Brandenburg-Prussia's shattered economy after the Thirty Years' War left the territory depopulated and its currency debased beyond function. Small billon pieces like this circulated alongside a chaotic mixture of foreign and locally struck coins, many of wildly varying silver content. The elector's monetary reforms of the 1670s attempted to impose order on this mess, though enforcement across fragmented territorial mints was uneven at best.
KM#466 spans over a decade of production, suggesting continuous demand for petty coinage rather than a single focused issue.