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| 正面描述 | 登录 以查看详情 |
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| 背面描述 | Within a beaded inner circle, a highly stylized dragon or wyvern is depicted in profile facing right, rendered in a bold Romanesque linear style with prominent claws, a crested head, and a curling tail that loops beneath the body. Small pellets and decorative elements fill the field surrounding the central motif. The reverse shows evidence of the single-die hammered technique, with the design slightly off-center on the broad, thin, and irregularly shaped silver flan. No inscription is present. |
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| 铸币厂 | Enns Mint |
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| 附加信息 |
Leopold VI ruled Austria and Styria simultaneously from 1194, making his reign one of the more administratively complex of the Babenberg dukes. The Enns mint served as a key issuing point under his authority, positioned at the boundary between Upper and Lower Austria — a geography that gave it commercial relevance beyond simple regional supply. These thin bracteate-influenced deniers circulated in a period when Austrian silver coinage was still finding coherent regional identity, well before the Vienna pfennig dominated local exchange in the later thirteenth century.