The jefimok program of 1655 was a fiscal emergency measure: Russia lacked the minting infrastructure to produce roubles at scale, so Alexey Mikhailovich's government simply overstruck foreign thalers already circulating in trade. The countermarks — a horseman punch and a dated cartouche — were applied to whatever acceptable-weight European silver was at hand, Joachimstalern, Leeuwendaalders, and occasional rarities like this Schwarzenburg piece among them.
The Schwarzenburg counts struck thalers only briefly in the early seventeenth century, making their coins uncommon even as raw host pieces. The program itself lasted a single year before being abandoned due to counterfeiting and public resistance to the forced exchange rates.
The jefimok program of 1655 was a fiscal emergency measure: Russia lacked the minting infrastructure to produce roubles at scale, so Alexey Mikhailovich's government simply overstruck foreign thalers already circulating in trade. The countermarks — a horseman punch and a dated cartouche — were applied to whatever acceptable-weight European silver was at hand, Joachimstalern, Leeuwendaalders, and occasional rarities like this Schwarzenburg piece among them.
The Schwarzenburg counts struck thalers only briefly in the early seventeenth century, making their coins uncommon even as raw host pieces. The program itself lasted a single year before being abandoned due to counterfeiting and public resistance to the forced exchange rates.