Matthias II secured the Hungarian crown in 1608 only after agreeing to sweeping concessions to the Diet — restoring noble privileges, guaranteeing Protestant freedoms, and removing Habsburg troops from the kingdom. The florins struck under his name during 1611–1613 belong to a reign defined less by royal authority than by managed compromise, issued from mints operating under conditions negotiated with the very estates the king nominally ruled.
The ÉH#826 attribution places this firmly within a well-documented but thinly circulated type. Kremnitz was the dominant Hungarian gold mint of the period, and output from these years was absorbed quickly by war financing against the Ottomans.
Matthias II secured the Hungarian crown in 1608 only after agreeing to sweeping concessions to the Diet — restoring noble privileges, guaranteeing Protestant freedoms, and removing Habsburg troops from the kingdom. The florins struck under his name during 1611–1613 belong to a reign defined less by royal authority than by managed compromise, issued from mints operating under conditions negotiated with the very estates the king nominally ruled.
The ÉH#826 attribution places this firmly within a well-documented but thinly circulated type. Kremnitz was the dominant Hungarian gold mint of the period, and output from these years was absorbed quickly by war financing against the Ottomans.