The triple-ducat denomination was never a coin of commerce — it existed to be given away. Sigismund III used such pieces as diplomatic gifts and court rewards, a practice rooted in the Renaissance tradition of the *Gnadenpfennig*. By 1612, the Kraków mint under Jan Scholtz was producing these in limited numbers almost entirely on royal commission rather than any treasury directive.
Surviving examples in any condition are genuinely scarce. The combination of low original production and the near-certain loss of most pieces to melting — later generations frequently liquidated gold presentation coinage when dynasties changed — accounts for this.
The triple-ducat denomination was never a coin of commerce — it existed to be given away. Sigismund III used such pieces as diplomatic gifts and court rewards, a practice rooted in the Renaissance tradition of the *Gnadenpfennig*. By 1612, the Kraków mint under Jan Scholtz was producing these in limited numbers almost entirely on royal commission rather than any treasury directive.
Surviving examples in any condition are genuinely scarce. The combination of low original production and the near-certain loss of most pieces to melting — later generations frequently liquidated gold presentation coinage when dynasties changed — accounts for this.