Vollständige Bilder anzeigen — kostenlose Registrierung
Mit Google fortfahren — kostenlos oder mit E-Mail registrieren

6 Goldgulden

Emittent Free Hanseatic City of Hamburg
Jahr 1505
Typ Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Nennwert Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Währung Mark (1325-1552)
Material Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Gewicht Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Durchmesser Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Dicke Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Form Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Prägetechnik Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Ausrichtung Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Stempelschneider Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Im Umlauf bis Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Referenz(en) Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Aversbeschreibung Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Aversschrift Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Averslegende Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Reversbeschreibung The reverse depicts the enthroned Virgin Mary, crowned and nimbed with a radiating glory of elongated rays emanating from her figure, shown facing the viewer in full length in the Gothic manner. She holds the Christ Child before her, the infant rendered with a sceptre or cross, both figures draped in flowing robes with fine linear drapery typical of early sixteenth-century North German die-cutting. A beaded inner border surrounds the composition, with the abbreviated votive legend distributed around the circumference of the coin in uncial lettering referencing the Virgin as the city's patron and hope.
Reversschrift Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Reverslegende * SPES * NOSTR * - * VIRGO * MAR' *
Rand Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Prägestätte Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Auflage Anmelden um Details zu sehen
Zusätzliche Informationen

Hamburg's six-gulden piece of 1505 belongs to a short-lived tradition of large-denomination gold multiples struck by the north German Hanseatic cities for wholesale mercantile settlement — values too large for ordinary retail but essential for clearing debts between trading houses operating across the Baltic and North Sea networks. The Hanseatic cities issued such pieces sporadically rather than systematically, which explains why surviving examples appear in so few collections.

Gaedechens 698 is among the rarest documented Hamburg gold issues of the early sixteenth century.