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Denier - Bernhard III

Issuer Saxony, Duchy of
Year 1180-1212
Type Standard circulation coin
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Obverse description Armoured half-length figure of Duke Bernhard III facing left, depicted in profile wearing a conical helmet, clad in chain mail, and holding a raised sword in the right hand and a lily sceptre in the left hand; the effigy is rendered in the bold, schematic style typical of Saxon bracteate-influenced deniers of the late 12th century.
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Reverse description Stylised Romanesque church or cathedral façade depicted frontally, featuring a central portal flanked by two towers with domed or crenellated tops, set within a beaded inner circle; the architectural rendering is highly schematic, consistent with the conventional ecclesiastical motifs found on Saxon deniers of the Bernhard III period, with additional decorative elements filling the field.
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Additional information

Bernhard III came to the duchy in 1180 as a direct beneficiary of Henry the Lion's catastrophic fall — when Frederick Barbarossa stripped the Welf duke of his territories, the Ascanian Bernhard received Saxony as reward for loyalty. These deniers were struck across a reign spanning three decades, and attributing individual pieces to a specific sub-period remains difficult without accompanying die studies.

The Jesse and Berger references place this type firmly within the bracteate-adjacent coinage of northern Germany, where thin silver pennies circulated alongside the broader bracteate tradition.

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