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Jefimok Rouble - Alexey Mikhailovich Countermarked over 'Saxony Taler of John George I 1632'

Issuer Russian Empire
Year 1655
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Value 1 Jefimok Rouble (1 Ефимок Рубль)
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Obverse lettering 1655 IOHAN. GEORG. D. G. DVX SAX. IVL. CLIV. ET. MONTI.
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Reverse script Latin
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Additional information

The jefimok ("efimok") program of 1655 was a wartime improvisation. Facing acute silver shortages during the Thirteen Years' War with Poland-Lithuania, Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich authorized the countermarking of Western European thalers already circulating in Russia rather than refining and recoining them. Two punches were applied: a horseman stamp and a date cartouche reading 1655. The underlying coin was not melted or reminted — just overstruck with authority and pushed back into circulation at a fixed rate of 64 kopeks, above its actual silver value.

The program lasted a single year before being abandoned, partly because the artificial valuation proved unsustainable. The specific host here — a Saxony thaler of Johann Georg I dated 1632 — was already over two decades old when countermarked, typical of the aged foreign silver accumulating in Russian trade channels by mid-century.

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