Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Fritz Rudolf Künker GmbH & Co. KG, Osnabrück and Lübke & Wiedemann KG, Leonberg
Context
Year: 1660
Country: Germany Country flag
Currency:
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 85 mm
Weight: 172.5 g
Silver weight: 172.50 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver
Magnetic: No
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard72
Numista: #275715
Value
Bullion value: $490.37

Obverse

Description:
Bust left in a circle of fourteen shields.
Inscription:
V G G GEORG WILHELM HERTZOG ZU BRAUNSCHWEIG U LUNE

H S
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Piety and Justice under a tree, a heavenly arm offering a wreath.
Inscription:
PIETATE ET JUSTITIA

6
Script: Latin

Edge

Mints

NameMark
Zellerfeld

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1660

Historical background

In 1660, the Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg, specifically the Principality of Calenberg under Duke George William, was entangled in the complex and debilitating monetary chaos common across the Holy Roman Empire. The region suffered from a severe proliferation of debased coinage, a problem stemming from the fragmentation of minting rights among numerous imperial states and cities. Neighboring territories, engaging in "Kipper- und Wipperzeit" practices (clipping and culling good coin to mint inferior ones), flooded the market with coins of drastically reduced silver content, causing inflation, commercial distrust, and economic instability within Calenberg.

The core of the issue was the discrepancy between the official Reichsthaler (Imperial Thaler), a large silver coin used as an accounting standard, and the myriad of smaller Landmünzen (regional coins) in daily circulation. Local authorities, including Calenberg, often felt compelled to debase their own coinage to prevent an outflow of silver bullion and to meet fiscal demands, particularly after the financial strains of the Thirty Years' War. This created a vicious cycle where the value of small change was unstable, harming peasants, wage earners, and merchants who relied on it for everyday transactions.

While a comprehensive imperial currency reform (the Zinnaische Münzvertrag of 1667) was still in the future, the year 1660 represents a point of acute crisis and growing recognition of the need for action. Duke George William, like his contemporaries, faced the difficult task of balancing his principality's fiscal needs with the imperative to restore monetary order, a prerequisite for economic recovery and stable state revenue. The situation thus called for regional and eventual imperial agreements to standardize coinage and restore confidence in the monetary system.

Series: 1660 Brunswick-Lüneburg-Calenberg circulation coins

4 Thalers obverse
4 Thalers reverse
4 Thalers
1660
5 Thalers obverse
5 Thalers reverse
5 Thalers
1660
6 Thalers obverse
6 Thalers reverse
6 Thalers
1660
Legendary