Ferdinand of Bavaria was appointed Bishop of Hildesheim in 1612 through the determined dynastic strategy of his family, holding it simultaneously with the Archbishopric of Cologne and several other sees — a concentration of ecclesiastical power that drew considerable resentment from Protestant estates in Lower Saxony. This multiple-benefice accumulation was precisely the kind of Roman Catholic consolidation that sharpened regional tensions in the years immediately preceding the Thirty Years' War.
The five-Goldgulden denomination, at roughly triple the weight of a standard Goldgulden, was struck for prestige rather than commerce. Mehl's Hild#480 records this as a rare type; surviving examples in any condition are seldom encountered at auction.
Ferdinand of Bavaria was appointed Bishop of Hildesheim in 1612 through the determined dynastic strategy of his family, holding it simultaneously with the Archbishopric of Cologne and several other sees — a concentration of ecclesiastical power that drew considerable resentment from Protestant estates in Lower Saxony. This multiple-benefice accumulation was precisely the kind of Roman Catholic consolidation that sharpened regional tensions in the years immediately preceding the Thirty Years' War.
The five-Goldgulden denomination, at roughly triple the weight of a standard Goldgulden, was struck for prestige rather than commerce. Mehl's Hild#480 records this as a rare type; surviving examples in any condition are seldom encountered at auction.