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Kopeck - Mikhail I МО

Issuer Imperial Russian Mint
Year 1613-1617
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Currency Rouble (1533-1717)
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Obverse script Cyrillic
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Reverse description The reverse bears a multi-line Cyrillic inscription occupying the entire field of the irregular silver flan, reading the full royal titulature of Tsar Mikhail Fyodorovich. The legend is disposed in horizontal lines across the flan in the typical fashion of early Romanov wire kopecks, with characters in an archaic Cyrillic hand. The inscription is partially clipped at the flan edges due to the hammered wire-money format. The text proclaims the ruler's title as Tsar and Grand Prince of All Russia.
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Mikhail Romanov's accession in 1613 ended the Time of Troubles — a decade of dynastic collapse, famine, Polish occupation of Moscow, and at least two rival tsars ruling simultaneously. The wire-money kopecks struck in his earliest years were produced using the same crude medieval technology that had been standard Russian practice for over a century: silver wire cut to weight, then struck between dies with hand hammers, producing the characteristically irregular fish-scale shape. Moscow mint output during 1613–1617 was critically important to restoring basic commercial function in a country whose monetary infrastructure had been severely disrupted by years of competing authorities issuing debased coin.

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