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| 正面描述 | Draped and armored bust of Duke Leopold I facing right, with flowing long wig rendered in fine detail, wearing a cuirass decorated with ornamental shoulder guards. The effigy is depicted in the baroque court portrait style typical of late 17th- to early 18th-century French-influenced engraving. The Latin legend encircles the bust close to the milled border, reading LEOP · I · D · G · D · LOT · BA · REX · IE, identifying Leopold I by the grace of God as Duke of Lorraine and Bar and King of Jerusalem. |
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| 正面铭文 | LEOP · I · D · G · D · LOT · BA · REX · IE (Translation: Leopold I, by God`s grace Duke of Lorraine, Bar, King of Jerusalem.) |
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| 铸币厂 | 登录 以查看详情 |
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| 附加信息 |
Leopold I spent much of his early reign in exile — the duchy was occupied by France from 1670 until 1698, and when he finally returned to Nancy he inherited a territory economically hollowed out by three decades of French administration. The 1702 coinage was part of a deliberate reassertion of ducal authority, struck under monetary ordinances that carefully mimicked French écu standards in weight and fineness to ease trade friction while still bearing unmistakably Lotharingian imagery.
The timing matters: 1702 is the opening year of the War of the Spanish Succession, which would drag Leopold into painful diplomatic contortions between his French and Habsburg allegiances for the next decade.