The monogram coinage issued under Charlemagne's reform of 793–794 was a direct response to a currency crisis: decades of debased, underweight deniers had eroded commercial confidence across the Frankish realm. The reform standardized the denier at roughly 1.7g of fine silver and introduced the royal monogram as a centralizing political statement, replacing the chaotic regional types that had proliferated under his predecessors.
Trier's mint had Roman roots going back to the 3rd century and remained one of the more productive ecclesiastical minting centers under Carolingian authority. The slight underweight of this example relative to reform specifications is not unusual — Trier output shows measurable variance across the Morrison corpus.
The monogram coinage issued under Charlemagne's reform of 793–794 was a direct response to a currency crisis: decades of debased, underweight deniers had eroded commercial confidence across the Frankish realm. The reform standardized the denier at roughly 1.7g of fine silver and introduced the royal monogram as a centralizing political statement, replacing the chaotic regional types that had proliferated under his predecessors.
Trier's mint had Roman roots going back to the 3rd century and remained one of the more productive ecclesiastical minting centers under Carolingian authority. The slight underweight of this example relative to reform specifications is not unusual — Trier output shows measurable variance across the Morrison corpus.