Géza II's reign coincided with intense Byzantine pressure on Hungary's southern frontier — Manuel I Komnenos invaded repeatedly through the 1150s, briefly installing a rival claimant on the Hungarian throne in 1155. The denier coinage of this period was struck in quantity to fund military mobilization, yet surviving examples are typically found in heavily worn condition, suggesting prolonged circulation rather than hoarding.
The ÉH#70 cataloguing places this among the thinner, lighter issues of the mid-twelfth century, reflecting a deliberate debasement trend that accelerated under Géza's successors.
Géza II's reign coincided with intense Byzantine pressure on Hungary's southern frontier — Manuel I Komnenos invaded repeatedly through the 1150s, briefly installing a rival claimant on the Hungarian throne in 1155. The denier coinage of this period was struck in quantity to fund military mobilization, yet surviving examples are typically found in heavily worn condition, suggesting prolonged circulation rather than hoarding.
The ÉH#70 cataloguing places this among the thinner, lighter issues of the mid-twelfth century, reflecting a deliberate debasement trend that accelerated under Géza's successors.