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1/16 thaler

Part of the collection: Pomeranian coins

Popularization note

Duke Philip Julius of Wolgast began his independent minting activity in 1609, in an illegal mint in the Ducal Castle of Franzburg. Until 1615, the mint was in the hands of a tenant Casper Rottermund, who disregarded the Duke's orders and minted small coins of inferior purity and weight. Mass production of mainly low-value pennies and two-shilling coins contributed to monetary destabilisation and the outbreak of inflation, which developed into hyperinflation. At the beginning of the 1720s, the crisis covered the whole Reich, and it was the period called Kipper und Wipperzeit. Due to the poor quality of money, the Duke's efforts to legalise the mint did not have the expected result, although the county states tolerated numerous mints, apart from the statutory ones, as long as their issues were up to standard. Despite calls from the states to close the mint, the Duke continued to operate it until the end of his reign. The repair of coinage was an urgent political demand. The most visible result of the Duke's struggle against inflation was the abandonment of minting and the devaluation of the low-value two-shillings. Following the example of Lübeck, Hamburg and Lüneburg, Spanish reales and pesos, minted from good South American silver, were taken out of circulation and made for a new series of 1/16 thalers called düttchen, in 1622. These scarce coins were given their original wording on the reverse (Nach Alten Schrott und Korn), which figuratively manifested a return to complete coinage, like good grain. This reference had a psychological meaning, indicating the strength and tradition of the Reich. On the iconographic side, the most prominent is the griffin in a shield placed on a long cross, which propagated the symbolic presence of the Duke. The signature of the acorn refers to the mint master Hans Puls, who held this position between 1622 and 1625.

Genowefa Horoszko

Information about the object

Information about this object

Other names

1/16 Taler|Düttchen

Author / creator

Filip Julisz, książę wołogoski (1584-1625) (emitent)
Puls, Hans (czynny 1622-1625) (mincmistrz)
Franzburg

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 1.2 mm

Object type

coin

Technique

minting

Material

silver

Creation time / dating

1622

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Franzburg (Niemcy) (wybicie), księstwo wołogosko-słupskie, państwo historyczne (Pomorze Zachodnie)

Owner

National Museum in Szczecin

Identification number

MNS/N/15877

Location / status

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