Catalog
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| Issuer | Stolberg-Stolberg, County of |
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| Year | 1717 |
| Type | Commemorative circulation coin |
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| Obverse description | A standing stag facing left is depicted in the central field, positioned before a tall column surmounted by a crown, the column's base bearing the initial 'S' for Stolberg. The stag, rendered in fine relief, rests upon a decorative plinth flanked by small foliate elements. The heraldic composition references the arms of the County of Stolberg-Stolberg. The circular legend surrounding the design reads GOTT SEEGNE U. ERHALTE UNSERE BERGWERCKE, invoking divine blessing upon the county's mining industry. |
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| Reverse script | Latin |
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| Additional information |
The 1717 Reformation bicentenary was one of the most heavily commemorated events in the early eighteenth-century German states, with dozens of ecclesiastical and secular authorities issuing medallic coinage to mark two hundred years since Luther's Ninety-Five Theses. Stolberg-Stolberg's participation is notable given the county's persistent Lutheranism throughout the Thirty Years' War, during which the region suffered repeated occupation and financial exhaustion. That a small, cash-poor county still struck a commemorative at this weight class says something about the political importance of confessional loyalty in the post-Westphalian order.
The ⅔ Thaler denomination — equivalent to the Gulden — was the dominant circulating silver unit across much of Protestant northern Germany at this date.