Catalog
| Issuer | Duchy of Carinthia (Austrian States) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1210-1230 |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | Log in to see details |
| Currency | Pfennig (800-1500) |
| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| Obverse description | Full-length frontal figure of a standing bishop in ecclesiastical vestments, holding a book in his left hand and a crozier in his right hand. The effigy is rendered in the flat, stylized manner characteristic of early 13th-century Friesach coinage. A Latin legend encircles the central design, contained between two concentric circles forming the border. |
|---|---|
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| Edge | Plain |
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| Additional information |
Friesach, in present-day Carinthia, was one of the most important minting centers in the German-speaking lands during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, producing the bracteate-adjacent pennies that dominated trade across the eastern Alpine region and into Hungary. The attribution "undetermined" here reflects a genuine scholarly problem: multiple ecclesiastical and secular authorities held minting rights at Friesach simultaneously — including the Archbishops of Salzburg and the Dukes of Carinthia — and the resulting typological overlap has resisted clean resolution for decades.
CNA Cj70 places this piece within the Carinthian ducal sequence, but that assignment remains contested in the literature.