Struck during the two-year interregnum following the death of Duke Conrad I of Brno in 1092, this denier falls within a murky succession period in Moravian history when competing Přemyslid claimants fragmented the margraviate into contested sub-duchies. Attribution to Brno specifically rests largely on Cach's die analysis rather than documentary evidence — the issuing authority during these years was unstable enough that mint continuity itself is uncertain.
Struck during the two-year interregnum following the death of Duke Conrad I of Brno in 1092, this denier falls within a murky succession period in Moravian history when competing Přemyslid claimants fragmented the margraviate into contested sub-duchies. Attribution to Brno specifically rests largely on Cach's die analysis rather than documentary evidence — the issuing authority during these years was unstable enough that mint continuity itself is uncertain.