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Daalder / 24 Stuiver - Willem IV

Issuer Lordship of Bergh
Year 1546-1586
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Composition Silver
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Reverse lettering DNS * PROTEC * VITE * MEE * A * Q * TREPIDA 24 SF
(Translation: The Lord is my Helper, whom should I fear 24 Stuivers)
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Mintage ND (1546-1586)
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The Lordship of Bergh occupied an awkward political position throughout the mid-sixteenth century — nominally within the Holy Roman Empire yet increasingly squeezed between Habsburg ambitions and the escalating revolt in the Low Countries. Willem IV van den Bergh, who married a sister of William of Orange in 1556, eventually sided with the rebels before defecting back to Spain in 1578, a reversal that cost him his lordship entirely by 1586. Coins struck under his name span the full arc of that political oscillation.

The daalder denomination at 24 stuiver was pegged to the Burgundian monetary system, filling a practical gap in large-denomination silver circulation that the Habsburg authorities struggled to supply consistently across the region's fragmented lordships.

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