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Denier - Béla III

Issuer Hungary
Year 1172-1196
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Currency Denier (997-1310)
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Reverse description A small Greek cross centered within an inner circle, its four arms each terminating in a small globule or circle. The cross is contained within a beaded or plain inner line circle, and the entire composition is unlettered, occupying a plain field typical of late twelfth-century Hungarian bracteate-influenced deniers.
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Edge Plain
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Additional information

Béla III came to power having spent years at the Byzantine court in Constantinople, where he was groomed as a potential heir to Manuel I Komnenos before dynastic circumstances redirected him back to Hungary. His reign saw the first Hungarian royal chancery producing written records in any volume — documents that incidentally allow historians to date coin types to his rule with more confidence than for most of his predecessors.

The Byzantine connection is not merely biographical trivia. Béla's exposure to a monetized imperial economy appears to have influenced Hungarian fiscal administration, though the coins themselves remained products of a fragmented, low-weight tradition far removed from Constantinople's output.

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