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| 背面描述 | The reverse displays a stylized architectural or heraldic motif, likely a simplified representation of a chapel or crown composed of a triangular pediment above a horizontal bar structure, all within a beaded border. The legend PRACIVISACVB is distributed around the circumference in retrograde and irregular Latin characters, generally interpreted as a corrupted form of PRAGA CIVITAS (City of Prague), indicating the mint city. The die engraving is characteristically rough, consistent with early Přemyslid hammered silver coinage. The overall composition is a standard Bohemian denier type associated with the Prague mint under Boleslaus II. |
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| 铸币厂 | Prague Mint |
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| 附加信息 |
Boleslaus II consolidated Christian ecclesiastical authority in Bohemia more aggressively than any of his predecessors, founding the Diocese of Prague in 973 and later the Diocese of Moravia — political moves that directly shaped the iconographic program of his coinage. His deniers were among the earliest struck silver issues of the Bohemian lands, produced at a moment when the Přemyslid dynasty was actively negotiating its relationship with both Rome and the Ottonian empire to the west.
Cach 134 is one of several attributed types spanning his long reign, and attribution within this series remains contested in the literature.