Kampen's gold ducats of the late sixteenth century were struck under the city's right to mint — a privilege fiercely defended by the Overijssel trading towns against repeated attempts by the Spanish Habsburg administration to centralize coinage control in the Netherlands. By 1597, the Dutch Revolt was well into its third decade, and Kampen, though a secondary commercial center compared to Amsterdam or Middelburg, continued issuing gold to facilitate trade along the IJssel river corridor.
Delmonte's classification places this piece within the scarcer municipal gold issues of the northern provinces.
Kampen's gold ducats of the late sixteenth century were struck under the city's right to mint — a privilege fiercely defended by the Overijssel trading towns against repeated attempts by the Spanish Habsburg administration to centralize coinage control in the Netherlands. By 1597, the Dutch Revolt was well into its third decade, and Kampen, though a secondary commercial center compared to Amsterdam or Middelburg, continued issuing gold to facilitate trade along the IJssel river corridor.
Delmonte's classification places this piece within the scarcer municipal gold issues of the northern provinces.