Géza I ruled for less than four years after seizing the Hungarian throne from his cousin Salomon, a dispute that drew in both the Holy Roman Empire and the Byzantine court as competing backers. His coinage was struck under that pressure — a reign defined by dynastic war rather than settled administration. The denier series attributed to him is catalogued with enough variant attributions across Éremhatározó and Corpus references to suggest ongoing scholarly disagreement about precise die assignments within the 1074–1077 window.
Géza I ruled for less than four years after seizing the Hungarian throne from his cousin Salomon, a dispute that drew in both the Holy Roman Empire and the Byzantine court as competing backers. His coinage was struck under that pressure — a reign defined by dynastic war rather than settled administration. The denier series attributed to him is catalogued with enough variant attributions across Éremhatározó and Corpus references to suggest ongoing scholarly disagreement about precise die assignments within the 1074–1077 window.