Béla IV's reign was defined less by his coinage than by the Mongol invasion of 1241–42, which destroyed roughly half of Hungary's population and left the kingdom's administrative infrastructure — including its minting operations — severely disrupted. The deniers produced under his name span thirty-five years of painstaking reconstruction, during which Béla systematically rebuilt fortifications and repopulated devastated regions by inviting foreign settlers, partly funded through reorganized royal revenues of which coinage was a component.
The ÉH#256 attribution places this piece within a corpus where die production was decentralized enough that minor varieties are common and strict attribution can be contested between catalogers.
Béla IV's reign was defined less by his coinage than by the Mongol invasion of 1241–42, which destroyed roughly half of Hungary's population and left the kingdom's administrative infrastructure — including its minting operations — severely disrupted. The deniers produced under his name span thirty-five years of painstaking reconstruction, during which Béla systematically rebuilt fortifications and repopulated devastated regions by inviting foreign settlers, partly funded through reorganized royal revenues of which coinage was a component.
The ÉH#256 attribution places this piece within a corpus where die production was decentralized enough that minor varieties are common and strict attribution can be contested between catalogers.