The Teutonic Order's coinage authority derived not from territorial sovereignty in the conventional sense but from its status as an Imperial Estate — the Hochmeister held a seat at the Imperial Diet, giving the Order the right to strike coin independently of any secular prince. By 1603, the Order had long abandoned Prussia to the Hohenzollerns and retreated to its Deutschmeister holdings in the southwest, making Hall in the Tyrol a critical administrative and financial center. Maximilian I of Austria served as Hochmeister from 1590 to 1618, the same Maximilian who would become Holy Roman Emperor in 1612.
Six-ducat multiples of this type were almost certainly struck for presentation rather than circulation — the weight alone made them impractical as currency.
The Teutonic Order's coinage authority derived not from territorial sovereignty in the conventional sense but from its status as an Imperial Estate — the Hochmeister held a seat at the Imperial Diet, giving the Order the right to strike coin independently of any secular prince. By 1603, the Order had long abandoned Prussia to the Hohenzollerns and retreated to its Deutschmeister holdings in the southwest, making Hall in the Tyrol a critical administrative and financial center. Maximilian I of Austria served as Hochmeister from 1590 to 1618, the same Maximilian who would become Holy Roman Emperor in 1612.
Six-ducat multiples of this type were almost certainly struck for presentation rather than circulation — the weight alone made them impractical as currency.