Ferdinand Maria struck this piece to mark the birth of his daughter Maria Anna in 1660, but the denomination designation is misleading — a 5-ducat silver pattern occupies a peculiar category, priced against a gold standard it never actually met. These were presentation objects, not monetary instruments, produced in small numbers for court distribution and diplomatic gift-giving. The Munich mint under the Wittelsbachs had a well-established tradition of such multi-ducat silver strikings specifically for occasions of dynastic significance.
Maria Anna would later marry John III Sobieski of Poland in 1670, making this birth commemorative a footnote to one of the more consequential dynastic unions of late 17th-century Central Europe.
Ferdinand Maria struck this piece to mark the birth of his daughter Maria Anna in 1660, but the denomination designation is misleading — a 5-ducat silver pattern occupies a peculiar category, priced against a gold standard it never actually met. These were presentation objects, not monetary instruments, produced in small numbers for court distribution and diplomatic gift-giving. The Munich mint under the Wittelsbachs had a well-established tradition of such multi-ducat silver strikings specifically for occasions of dynastic significance.
Maria Anna would later marry John III Sobieski of Poland in 1670, making this birth commemorative a footnote to one of the more consequential dynastic unions of late 17th-century Central Europe.