Peter I's wire kopecks — the so-called "cheshuykas" — were a medieval holdover that he actively despised and moved to abolish. Struck by the traditional hammered method on irregularly clipped wire blanks, they predated his 1700 monetary reform but continued in parallel production through 1718, largely because rural peasant economies refused to abandon them. The 1709 date places this piece in the same year as Poltava, where the Swedish army's defeat effectively ended Charles XII as a strategic threat and freed Peter to accelerate his Westernization program — including, eventually, the final suppression of this coinage type.
Peter I's wire kopecks — the so-called "cheshuykas" — were a medieval holdover that he actively despised and moved to abolish. Struck by the traditional hammered method on irregularly clipped wire blanks, they predated his 1700 monetary reform but continued in parallel production through 1718, largely because rural peasant economies refused to abandon them. The 1709 date places this piece in the same year as Poltava, where the Swedish army's defeat effectively ended Charles XII as a strategic threat and freed Peter to accelerate his Westernization program — including, eventually, the final suppression of this coinage type.