The bishops of Geneva exercised both ecclesiastical and secular authority over the city and its surrounding territory throughout the medieval period, and their coinage rights — granted by the Holy Roman Emperor — were among the most jealously defended of their privileges. The long dating range reflects successive episcopal issues rather than a single continuous production, with stylistic evolution across bishops making attribution to specific reigns a matter of die study rather than inscription.
Geneva's position on major trans-Alpine trade routes gave even small silver deniers genuine commercial utility well beyond the diocese itself.
The bishops of Geneva exercised both ecclesiastical and secular authority over the city and its surrounding territory throughout the medieval period, and their coinage rights — granted by the Holy Roman Emperor — were among the most jealously defended of their privileges. The long dating range reflects successive episcopal issues rather than a single continuous production, with stylistic evolution across bishops making attribution to specific reigns a matter of die study rather than inscription.
Geneva's position on major trans-Alpine trade routes gave even small silver deniers genuine commercial utility well beyond the diocese itself.