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Groschen - Immobilization in the name of Charles V

Issuer Besançon, Free imperial city of
Year 1622-1623
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Reference(s) KM#15, PA#5417, Dy féodales#3068
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Reverse lettering ✠ MONETA . CIV . IMP . BISONT
(Translation: Coinage of the imperial city of Besançon.)
Edge Plain
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Additional information

Besançon occupied a peculiar constitutional position in the early seventeenth century — formally a free imperial city within the Holy Roman Empire, yet geographically embedded in the Franche-Comté, a territory under Spanish Habsburg control. The city exploited this ambiguity aggressively in its coinage, continuing to strike in the name of Charles V decades after his 1558 abdication and death. This practice of "immobilization" was not nostalgia but legal strategy: Charles V had granted Besançon minting privileges, and invoking his name perpetuated those rights without requiring renegotiation with his successors.

The 1622–1623 date places this piece during the opening phase of the Thirty Years' War, when monetary chaos across the Empire was at its worst — the period known as the Kipper- und Wipperzeit, a debasement crisis that saw scores of mints flooding markets with underweight silver. Besançon's stubborn adherence to established weight standards during precisely this period gives these groschen an unusual integrity among contemporary issues.

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