Aachen's goldsmiths produced these heavy multiple-ducat pieces not as circulating currency but as presentation medals — the so-called Judenmedaille, issued specifically to be given to prominent Jewish visitors granted an audience with the city council. The practice reflected Aachen's peculiar status: Jews were formally barred from residing within the city walls, yet the council maintained carefully managed diplomatic contact with wealthy Jewish merchants and financiers whose networks were commercially indispensable. The medal was a calculated gesture of transactional respect.
1619 places this squarely in the years immediately before the Thirty Years' War engulfed the region. Menadier 59 is among the more substantial die varieties documented for this type.
Aachen's goldsmiths produced these heavy multiple-ducat pieces not as circulating currency but as presentation medals — the so-called Judenmedaille, issued specifically to be given to prominent Jewish visitors granted an audience with the city council. The practice reflected Aachen's peculiar status: Jews were formally barred from residing within the city walls, yet the council maintained carefully managed diplomatic contact with wealthy Jewish merchants and financiers whose networks were commercially indispensable. The medal was a calculated gesture of transactional respect.
1619 places this squarely in the years immediately before the Thirty Years' War engulfed the region. Menadier 59 is among the more substantial die varieties documented for this type.