The 8 Groschen denomination was a creature of the Kipper- und Wipperzeit — the "clipping and see-sawing" inflation crisis of 1619–1623 that debased coinage across the Holy Roman Empire with staggering speed. Smaller states and mint operators, Saxony among them, flooded circulation with underweight silver pieces to exploit exchange rate differentials before the inevitable collapse. John George I had initially resisted the worst debasement practices, but fiscal pressure during the early Thirty Years' War proved overwhelming.
The Rah/Kr#16h reference places this among a tightly documented cluster of varieties from that window of crisis minting.
The 8 Groschen denomination was a creature of the Kipper- und Wipperzeit — the "clipping and see-sawing" inflation crisis of 1619–1623 that debased coinage across the Holy Roman Empire with staggering speed. Smaller states and mint operators, Saxony among them, flooded circulation with underweight silver pieces to exploit exchange rate differentials before the inevitable collapse. John George I had initially resisted the worst debasement practices, but fiscal pressure during the early Thirty Years' War proved overwhelming.
The Rah/Kr#16h reference places this among a tightly documented cluster of varieties from that window of crisis minting.