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Denier - Louis I

Issuer Kingdom of Hungary
Year 1346-1357
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Currency Florin (1310-1540)
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Obverse description Crowned facing bust of King Louis I rendered in a crude, medieval Gothic style characteristic of mid-14th-century Hungarian hammered coinage. The king's face is depicted frontally with a prominent crown above, flanked by stylized decorative elements on either side of the bust. The portrait occupies the central field of the irregular, hand-struck flan. A circular legend surrounds the bust, reading '+ M REGIS hVnGARIE', denoting the money of the King of Hungary. The overall style reflects the primitive engraving conventions of the Angevin period in Hungary.
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Obverse lettering + M REGIS hVnGARIE
(Translation: Money of King of Hungary)
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Additional information

Louis I came to the Hungarian throne in 1342 and spent much of the following decade consolidating Angevin power while pursuing an aggressive campaign to claim the Kingdom of Naples — a venture that consumed enormous resources and drove significant monetary policy decisions in Budapest. The deniers issued under his early reign reflect a period of relative monetary stability before his later coinage reforms began fragmenting the weight standard.

ÉH#423 is distinguished from adjacent types in the series by subtle die characteristics that numismatists have used to anchor it within the 1346–1357 window rather than the broader Louis I issue span.

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