See full images - free registration
Continue with Google - no registration! or register with email

Why register? Just to keep bots out of our catalog. Your email stays private - we will never share it or send you anything uninvited. We guarantee you that!

Batzen

Issuer Colmar, City of
Year 1532-1535
Type Log in to see details
Value 1 Batzen = 4 Kreuzer (1⁄15)
Currency Log in to see details
Composition Log in to see details
Weight Log in to see details
Diameter Log in to see details
Thickness Log in to see details
Shape Log in to see details
Technique Log in to see details
Orientation Log in to see details
Engraver(s) Log in to see details
In circulation to Log in to see details
Reference(s) Log in to see details
Obverse description Log in to see details
Obverse script Log in to see details
Obverse lettering ✠ MONETA ᛭ NOVA ᛭ COLMARENSIS 1534
(Translation: New coinage of Colmar.)
Reverse description Log in to see details
Reverse script Log in to see details
Reverse lettering Log in to see details
Edge Plain
Mint Log in to see details
Mintage Log in to see details
Additional information

Colmar's civic coinage of this period reflects the city's uneasy position within the Habsburg orbit — nominally under imperial authority but jealously guarding its municipal minting rights throughout the early sixteenth century. The Batzen denomination itself was a trans-regional Swiss-German invention, first struck at Bern around 1492, that spread rapidly because it filled a practical gap between the small silver pfennig and the larger guldengroschen.

Issues attributable to the 1532–1535 window fall during a period of acute confessional tension in Alsace, as Colmar navigated the Reformation's encroachment on civic institutions. The city formally adopted Lutheranism in 1575, but the preceding decades saw considerable internal fracture — a detail that complicates assumptions about institutional continuity at the mint.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE