Bernard II ruled Carinthia from 1202 until his death in 1256, and his coinage reflects the duchy's position as a transit zone between the Italian trading cities and the markets of the upper Danube. The Heiligenkreuz type takes its name from the Cistercian abbey of Heiligenkreuz in the Vienna Woods, which held significant landholdings in Carinthia and maintained close ties to the Babenberg and Sponheim dynasties alike. Whether the abbey had any direct role in authorizing or profiting from this issue remains debated among Austrian medieval numismatists.
These thin bracteate-influenced pfennigs were struck by hammer on hand-cut flans, which accounts for the irregular striking surfaces common to the type. CNA Cq87 is among the more precisely documented attributions in the Carinthian series.
Bernard II ruled Carinthia from 1202 until his death in 1256, and his coinage reflects the duchy's position as a transit zone between the Italian trading cities and the markets of the upper Danube. The Heiligenkreuz type takes its name from the Cistercian abbey of Heiligenkreuz in the Vienna Woods, which held significant landholdings in Carinthia and maintained close ties to the Babenberg and Sponheim dynasties alike. Whether the abbey had any direct role in authorizing or profiting from this issue remains debated among Austrian medieval numismatists.
These thin bracteate-influenced pfennigs were struck by hammer on hand-cut flans, which accounts for the irregular striking surfaces common to the type. CNA Cq87 is among the more precisely documented attributions in the Carinthian series.