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Jefimok Rouble - Alexey Mikhailovich Countermarked over 'Mansfeld-Eisleben Thaler'

发行方 Imperial Russian Mint
年份 1655
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重量 29.19 g
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正面描述 Host coin: Mansfeld-Eisleben Thaler (dated 1577–1579, Dav. 9495), struck in hammered silver. The obverse depicts an armored equestrian figure of Emperor Rudolf II rearing to the right on a prancing horse, trampling a dragon or serpent beneath the horse's hooves. A circular legend surrounds the central device within a beaded border, reading RUDOLPHVS II D G ROMANORVM... and continuing around the field. Two Russian countermarks applied in 1655 are present: a rectangular cartouche bearing the date '1655' and a separate oval cartouche depicting a galloping horseman (St. George type) with a spear, both punched into the obverse field as part of the official Muscovite jefimok countermarking program under Tsar Alexey Mikhailovich.
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正面铭文 RUDOLPHVS II D G ROMANORVM · SEM · AP · F · D · 1655
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附加信息

The jefimok ("ефимок") program of 1655 was a direct response to Muscovy's chronic shortage of silver bullion: the state had no domestic silver mines and depended entirely on imported Western European thalers as raw material for its coinage. Rather than melt and restrike the coins outright — a slow and expensive process — Tsar Alexey Mikhailovich ordered captured and purchased thalers counterstamped with a horseman punch and a date cartouche, effectively conscripting foreign currency into the Russian monetary system overnight.

The Mansfeld-Eisleben thalers used as host coins came from the Saxon copper-mining county of Mansfeld, whose silver output had declined sharply by mid-century. The counterstamp program lasted only a single year before being abandoned, likely because the jefimoki circulated at a forced valuation — 64 kopecks — that the market refused to accept at face.

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