During the upheaval following the Napoleonic Wars, Bern faced a severe shortage of large-denomination silver coinage. Rather than strike an entirely new issue, the canton authorized the counterstamping of existing foreign thalers — primarily Brabant and French écus — circulating within its borders, legitimizing them at 40 Batzen and bringing them formally into the local monetary system. It was an expedient solution typical of cash-strapped post-war cantonal administrations across Switzerland.
The counterstamp itself, applied between 1816 and 1819, is the coin's primary collectible attribute. Host coin identity matters considerably to value here.
During the upheaval following the Napoleonic Wars, Bern faced a severe shortage of large-denomination silver coinage. Rather than strike an entirely new issue, the canton authorized the counterstamping of existing foreign thalers — primarily Brabant and French écus — circulating within its borders, legitimizing them at 40 Batzen and bringing them formally into the local monetary system. It was an expedient solution typical of cash-strapped post-war cantonal administrations across Switzerland.
The counterstamp itself, applied between 1816 and 1819, is the coin's primary collectible attribute. Host coin identity matters considerably to value here.