| 裏面の説明 |
The reverse displays a mounted horseman in profile facing right, depicted in the Romanesque equestrian style typical of 12th-century Austrian and Bavarian pfennigs. The rider appears armed or robed, seated upon a horse shown in full stride, with decorative scrollwork and foliage filling the surrounding field. A horizontal ground line or decorative band separates the horse's legs from the lower field, which contains additional interlaced ornamental motifs. A wheel or rosette device appears to the right of the composition. The design is contained within a beaded border following the irregular outline of the hammered flan. |
Formbach was a small but strategically positioned county in the Inn quarter of Bavaria, and its comital line held minting rights that were jealously guarded through the early twelfth century. Werinto and Dietrich are identified as co-rulers during this decade, a joint authority arrangement not uncommon in dynastic transitions where succession was contested or a minority was involved. The county's line died out in 1158, after which its territories passed to the Bishopric of Passau — making the entire Formbach coinage a closed series of finite duration.