John George II inherited the electorate in 1656 still carrying the financial wreckage of the Thirty Years' War, yet maintained one of the most prolific minting programs among German princes of his generation — partly prestige, partly a deliberate assertion of electoral prerogative over Saxon silver production from the Erzgebirge mines. The 4 Thaler denomination was never a coin of commerce; pieces like this were struck as presentation issues and Schaumünzen, circulated among courts rather than markets.
The Clauss/Kahnt reference places this among a documented series of large multiple thalers from the Dresden and Leipzig mints active under John George II, with the Erzgebirge output peaking in the early 1660s before declining silver yields forced output reductions later in the decade.
John George II inherited the electorate in 1656 still carrying the financial wreckage of the Thirty Years' War, yet maintained one of the most prolific minting programs among German princes of his generation — partly prestige, partly a deliberate assertion of electoral prerogative over Saxon silver production from the Erzgebirge mines. The 4 Thaler denomination was never a coin of commerce; pieces like this were struck as presentation issues and Schaumünzen, circulated among courts rather than markets.
The Clauss/Kahnt reference places this among a documented series of large multiple thalers from the Dresden and Leipzig mints active under John George II, with the Erzgebirge output peaking in the early 1660s before declining silver yields forced output reductions later in the decade.