Vladislaus Henry ruled Moravia as margrave under the shifting pressures of Hohenstaufen imperial politics, his tenure spanning the contested succession struggles that followed the death of Emperor Henry VI in 1197. The deniers issued under his name belong to the Přemyslid administration of the margraviate, a period when Bohemian and Moravian coinage was still firmly rooted in the thin, broad flan bracteate-adjacent traditions of central European minting.
Cach 881 is among the more localized references in Bohemian-Moravian numismatics, and examples attributable with confidence to this type are infrequently encountered outside Czech institutional collections.
Vladislaus Henry ruled Moravia as margrave under the shifting pressures of Hohenstaufen imperial politics, his tenure spanning the contested succession struggles that followed the death of Emperor Henry VI in 1197. The deniers issued under his name belong to the Přemyslid administration of the margraviate, a period when Bohemian and Moravian coinage was still firmly rooted in the thin, broad flan bracteate-adjacent traditions of central European minting.
Cach 881 is among the more localized references in Bohemian-Moravian numismatics, and examples attributable with confidence to this type are infrequently encountered outside Czech institutional collections.