The Abbey of Saint Gall held the imperial privilege of coinage — granted by Carolingian rulers and confirmed by successive emperors — allowing it to strike silver deniers throughout the early medieval period. Ecclesiastical minting of this kind was less a commercial enterprise than a jurisdictional assertion, tying monetary authority directly to abbatial power over the surrounding territory. The anonymous attribution is deliberate: these issues carry no ruler's name, a practice common among imperial abbeys that framed the coinage as institutional rather than personal.
Kluge's classification under the Karolingische Münzen sequence places this squarely within the post-Carolingian regional coinage tradition of the Upper Rhine and Alemannic zones.
The Abbey of Saint Gall held the imperial privilege of coinage — granted by Carolingian rulers and confirmed by successive emperors — allowing it to strike silver deniers throughout the early medieval period. Ecclesiastical minting of this kind was less a commercial enterprise than a jurisdictional assertion, tying monetary authority directly to abbatial power over the surrounding territory. The anonymous attribution is deliberate: these issues carry no ruler's name, a practice common among imperial abbeys that framed the coinage as institutional rather than personal.
Kluge's classification under the Karolingische Münzen sequence places this squarely within the post-Carolingian regional coinage tradition of the Upper Rhine and Alemannic zones.