Rann — modern Brežice in Slovenia — served as a secondary mint for Salzburg during a period when the archbishops were aggressively expanding their monetary authority across the southeastern Alpine passes. The joint attribution to Eberhard II and Leopold VI spans nearly half a century, and the wide dating range reflects genuine scholarly uncertainty rather than a single continuous issue; dies likely changed multiple times across that window.
Eberhard II held the see from 1200 to 1246 and spent much of his tenure in conflict with the Bavarian dukes over territorial and ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
Rann — modern Brežice in Slovenia — served as a secondary mint for Salzburg during a period when the archbishops were aggressively expanding their monetary authority across the southeastern Alpine passes. The joint attribution to Eberhard II and Leopold VI spans nearly half a century, and the wide dating range reflects genuine scholarly uncertainty rather than a single continuous issue; dies likely changed multiple times across that window.
Eberhard II held the see from 1200 to 1246 and spent much of his tenure in conflict with the Bavarian dukes over territorial and ecclesiastical jurisdiction.