August III ruled the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth as an absentee king, spending the bulk of his reign in Dresden and leaving Polish monetary affairs largely to his Saxon administration. The ⅔ Talar denomination — a Gulden by another name — was a unit more native to the German monetary system than to Polish tradition, reflecting how thoroughly Saxon financial conventions bled into Commonwealth coinage under this dynasty.
Kopicki 11546 is a Dresden product, struck at the Elector's Saxon mint rather than on Commonwealth soil. That distinction matters: Dresden output for Polish titles often shows sharper die work than contemporary issues from Grodno or Warsaw.
August III ruled the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth as an absentee king, spending the bulk of his reign in Dresden and leaving Polish monetary affairs largely to his Saxon administration. The ⅔ Talar denomination — a Gulden by another name — was a unit more native to the German monetary system than to Polish tradition, reflecting how thoroughly Saxon financial conventions bled into Commonwealth coinage under this dynasty.
Kopicki 11546 is a Dresden product, struck at the Elector's Saxon mint rather than on Commonwealth soil. That distinction matters: Dresden output for Polish titles often shows sharper die work than contemporary issues from Grodno or Warsaw.