Bracteates of Lower Lusatia occupy an awkward corner of medieval numismatics — thin-flan single-sided silver issues produced across the German-speaking lands after roughly 1130, when regional lords began asserting coinage rights independently of imperial control. Lower Lusatia's margravate changed hands repeatedly across the 12th and 13th centuries, passing between the Wettin, Askanier, and eventually Piast dynasties, which makes precise attribution of individual bracteate types genuinely difficult. The Fr#193 reference anchors this piece to Friederich's corpus, but many specialists treat bracteate attributions at this regional level with some skepticism.
At 0.36 g, this sits at the lighter end of the bracteate weight range, consistent with the general debasement trend observable across Lusatian issues after mid-century.
Bracteates of Lower Lusatia occupy an awkward corner of medieval numismatics — thin-flan single-sided silver issues produced across the German-speaking lands after roughly 1130, when regional lords began asserting coinage rights independently of imperial control. Lower Lusatia's margravate changed hands repeatedly across the 12th and 13th centuries, passing between the Wettin, Askanier, and eventually Piast dynasties, which makes precise attribution of individual bracteate types genuinely difficult. The Fr#193 reference anchors this piece to Friederich's corpus, but many specialists treat bracteate attributions at this regional level with some skepticism.
At 0.36 g, this sits at the lighter end of the bracteate weight range, consistent with the general debasement trend observable across Lusatian issues after mid-century.