Jaromír ruled Bohemia three separate times, twice restored to power by German intervention after being deposed by his brother Boleslav III and later by the Poles under Bolesław I Chrobry, who occupied Bohemia from 1003 to 1004. The coinage of this reign is consequently difficult to sequence chronologically, and Cach's classification remains the primary framework numismatists use to distinguish issues across these interrupted periods.
Surviving examples are rarely found outside Bohemian hoard contexts, most of which were deposited during the political instability of the early eleventh century.
Jaromír ruled Bohemia three separate times, twice restored to power by German intervention after being deposed by his brother Boleslav III and later by the Poles under Bolesław I Chrobry, who occupied Bohemia from 1003 to 1004. The coinage of this reign is consequently difficult to sequence chronologically, and Cach's classification remains the primary framework numismatists use to distinguish issues across these interrupted periods.
Surviving examples are rarely found outside Bohemian hoard contexts, most of which were deposited during the political instability of the early eleventh century.