The 1717 Reformation bicentenary prompted a wave of commemorative coinage across the Protestant German states, and the small county of Stolberg-Stolberg was among those that seized the occasion. Two hundred years after Luther's Ninety-Five Theses, these issues functioned as much as confessional statements as they did currency — political assertions of continued Lutheran allegiance at a time when the Habsburg Counter-Reformation had spent a century testing Protestant resolve in the Empire.
Stolberg issues from this series are catalogued across multiple specialist references, suggesting reasonable collector attention, though the county's output was modest by any standard. The Müseler attribution places this piece within a well-documented Harz-region mining noble tradition.
The 1717 Reformation bicentenary prompted a wave of commemorative coinage across the Protestant German states, and the small county of Stolberg-Stolberg was among those that seized the occasion. Two hundred years after Luther's Ninety-Five Theses, these issues functioned as much as confessional statements as they did currency — political assertions of continued Lutheran allegiance at a time when the Habsburg Counter-Reformation had spent a century testing Protestant resolve in the Empire.
Stolberg issues from this series are catalogued across multiple specialist references, suggesting reasonable collector attention, though the county's output was modest by any standard. The Müseler attribution places this piece within a well-documented Harz-region mining noble tradition.