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⅔ Thaler - August William

Issuer Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Principality of
Year 1716-1730
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Composition Silver
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Obverse script Latin
Obverse lettering D.G. DUX BRUNSVIC. ET LUNEBURG H H
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Additional information

The 2/3 Thaler — equivalent to the Gulden and widely accepted across Protestant German states as a de facto trade coin — became the dominant large silver denomination in the Holy Roman Empire's northern territories during the early eighteenth century. Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel's sustained output under August Wilhelm, who ruled from 1714 until his death in 1731, reflects the principality's deliberate effort to maintain monetary credibility at a moment when smaller German states were aggressively debasing their own 2/3 Thaler issues. The so-called Kipper and Zwittermünzen controversies of the previous century had left German merchants deeply suspicious of regional silver, and consistent weight maintenance was a commercial argument as much as a fiscal one.

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