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Denier Bracteate

Issuer Brunswick, City of
Year 1296-1498
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Currency Denier (1296-1498)
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Reverse description Uniface bracteate; the reverse presents the incuse mirror image of the obverse design, showing the Brunswick lion in shallow negative relief as an unavoidable consequence of the single-die hammered bracteate technique. No inscriptions or additional devices are present.
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Mintage ND (1296-1498)
Additional information

Brunswick's bracteate deniers occupy an unusual position in north German civic coinage — struck across two full centuries with remarkable design continuity, they reflect the city's stubborn monetary conservatism during a period when most neighboring mints were abandoning single-sided thin-flan coinage entirely. The Hanseatic trading network Brunswick belonged to created enough regional demand for small-denomination silver that the type remained economically viable long after it had become technically archaic elsewhere.

The Denicke 343 reference places this among a well-documented local sequence, though die-to-die variation within the type is considerable across the 200-year production span.

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