Henri IV of Eichstätt served as bishop from 995 to 1017, and deniers struck under his authority at Eichstätt reflect the devolved minting rights granted to ecclesiastical lords during the Ottonian period — a direct consequence of the imperial church system through which Otto I and his successors bound episcopal authority tightly to royal administration. Eichstätt's mint output from this period is sparse in surviving examples, and attribution to specific episcopal reigns often relies heavily on Kluge's die studies rather than documentary evidence alone.
Henri IV of Eichstätt served as bishop from 995 to 1017, and deniers struck under his authority at Eichstätt reflect the devolved minting rights granted to ecclesiastical lords during the Ottonian period — a direct consequence of the imperial church system through which Otto I and his successors bound episcopal authority tightly to royal administration. Eichstätt's mint output from this period is sparse in surviving examples, and attribution to specific episcopal reigns often relies heavily on Kluge's die studies rather than documentary evidence alone.