Wenceslaus I ruled Bohemia through a period of intensive German colonization, actively encouraging the settlement of German miners and merchants whose silver-working expertise transformed Bohemian minting practices. Bracteate production in this region reflects that influence directly — the technique of striking thin single-sided flans was imported from German-speaking territories to the north and west, and Bohemian examples from this reign sit at the intersection of two distinct minting traditions.
Fiala's classification of this piece as XXV/6 places it among the larger bracteate issues, distinguished from the smaller denominations by flan diameter rather than weight differential alone. Fiala's corpus, though now over a century old, remains the primary reference for Přemyslid bracteates.
Wenceslaus I ruled Bohemia through a period of intensive German colonization, actively encouraging the settlement of German miners and merchants whose silver-working expertise transformed Bohemian minting practices. Bracteate production in this region reflects that influence directly — the technique of striking thin single-sided flans was imported from German-speaking territories to the north and west, and Bohemian examples from this reign sit at the intersection of two distinct minting traditions.
Fiala's classification of this piece as XXV/6 places it among the larger bracteate issues, distinguished from the smaller denominations by flan diameter rather than weight differential alone. Fiala's corpus, though now over a century old, remains the primary reference for Přemyslid bracteates.