Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1780–1790
Country: Austria Country flag
Ruler: Joseph II
Currency:
(1754—1857)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 9,153,000
Material
Diameter: 24 mm
Weight: 3.49 g
Gold weight: 3.44 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 98.6% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1873
Numista: #33435
Value
Bullion value: $573.74

Obverse

Description:
Laureate right-facing bust, mint mark beneath, encircling legend (starting at 1 o'clock).
Inscription:
IOS·II·D·G·R·I·S·A· GE·HV·BO·REX·

B
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Imperial double-headed eagle with Austria-Lorraine breast shield, surrounded by legend starting at 1 o'clock, date at end.
Inscription:
ARCH·A·D·BVRG· LOTH·M·D·H·1790·
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1780A
1782A
1783A
1783E
1783G
1784A
1784E
1784G
1785A
1786A
1786B128,000
1786E
1786G
1786M
1787A
1787B220,000
1787E
1787F
1787G
1787M
1788A
1788M
1788B257,000
1788E
1788F
1788G
1789A
1789B205,000
1789E
1789F
1789G
1790A
1790B172,000
1790E
1790F8,171,000
1790G

Historical background

In 1780, the currency situation within the Habsburg Monarchy, often referred to as the Austrian Empire, was characterized by profound complexity and instability, a legacy of the costly Seven Years' War (1756-1763) and the ongoing reforms of Empress Maria Theresa. The state treasury was depleted, and the government relied heavily on debt financing and the debasement of coinage to meet its obligations. The monetary system was not unified; it operated on a bimetallic standard of silver Gulden (florins) and gold Ducats, but a plethora of regional and historical coins circulated alongside them, their values fluctuating across the empire's diverse lands, from Austria and Bohemia to Hungary and the Austrian Netherlands.

The primary response to this fiscal crisis was the continued issuance of paper money, known as Bancozettel, from the state-owned Wiener Stadtbanco. First introduced in 1762 to fund the war, these banknotes were not fully convertible to specie (hard coin) and their value began to depreciate against silver shortly after their creation. By 1780, a growing gap existed between the face value of the paper currency and its actual market worth, creating a dual system where goods often had two prices—one in silver and a higher one in paper. This erosion of trust in the paper money sowed confusion in commerce and placed a burden on the populace, particularly those on fixed incomes.

Empress Maria Theresa's death in 1780 marked a transition, but the structural monetary problems persisted for her successor, Joseph II. The underlying issue was a fiscal policy that used currency emission as a tool for state financing rather than backing it with sufficient precious metals or economic productivity. Consequently, the stage was set for the further depreciation of the Bancozettel in the coming decades, a process that would culminate in a major currency crisis and state bankruptcy in 1811. The situation in 1780 was thus a precarious and unsustainable equilibrium, representing the early phase of a chronic paper money inflation that would plague the empire for nearly half a century.

Series: 1780 Austrian Empire circulation coins

1 Ducat obverse
1 Ducat reverse
1 Ducat
1780-1782
1 Ducat obverse
1 Ducat reverse
1 Ducat
1780-1790
¼ Kreuzer obverse
¼ Kreuzer reverse
¼ Kreuzer
1780
½ Kreuzer obverse
½ Kreuzer reverse
½ Kreuzer
1780
1 Kreuzer obverse
1 Kreuzer reverse
1 Kreuzer
1780
½ Kreuzer obverse
½ Kreuzer reverse
½ Kreuzer
1780-1790
20 Ducats obverse
20 Ducats reverse
20 Ducats
1780
💎 Very Rare