Wenceslaus I ruled Bohemia during a period of intensive German colonization, actively recruiting settlers from the Holy Roman Empire — a policy that reshaped Bohemian towns, law, and coinage simultaneously. The bracteate format itself reflects this German influence, having migrated east through Saxony and Thuringia before being adopted by Bohemian mints in the early thirteenth century. These thin, single-sided strikes are notoriously fragile; the blanks were so delicate that even careful handling causes the characteristic radial cracks collectors encounter on nearly every surviving example.
Wenceslaus I ruled Bohemia during a period of intensive German colonization, actively recruiting settlers from the Holy Roman Empire — a policy that reshaped Bohemian towns, law, and coinage simultaneously. The bracteate format itself reflects this German influence, having migrated east through Saxony and Thuringia before being adopted by Bohemian mints in the early thirteenth century. These thin, single-sided strikes are notoriously fragile; the blanks were so delicate that even careful handling causes the characteristic radial cracks collectors encounter on nearly every surviving example.