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Denier Bracteate

Issuer Hamburg, Free Hanseatic city of
Year 1350-1360
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Weight 0.28 g
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Obverse description Within a beaded inner circle surrounded by a radiating lozenge or reed border, the Hamburg city gate is depicted in stylized form: a central archway surmounted by a trident-like turret structure with vertical striations representing battlements, flanked by a small pellet on each side in the field. The design is rendered in the flat, single-sided relief characteristic of bracteate coinage, with the impression showing through the thin flan. The overall composition is compact and heraldic, consistent with North German municipal coinage of the mid-fourteenth century.
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Mintage ND (1350-1360)
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Hamburg struck these thin, single-sided bracteates during a period when the city was consolidating its commercial independence along the North Sea and Baltic trade routes. The bracteate format — a technique of pressing a single die through a flan so thin the image mirrors in relief on the reverse — was already archaic by the mid-fourteenth century in most German minting centers, making Hamburg's continued use of it notably conservative for a city otherwise aggressively modernizing its mercantile infrastructure.

At 0.28 g, the flan is exceptionally fragile. Undamaged survivors without splits or edge cracks are genuinely scarce.