In 1633, the currency situation in Swedish-occupied Pomerania was one of severe crisis and complexity, deeply entangled in the broader devastation of the Thirty Years' War. The region’s monetary system had been shattered by decades of conflict, with competing currencies circulating from various German states, the Holy Roman Empire, and the Swedish war effort itself. The primary means of exchange for everyday transactions were often debased
Kipper und Wipper coins from the 1620s, which had been intentionally minted with lower precious metal content to fund the war, leading to rampant inflation and a profound loss of public trust in coinage.
Sweden’s administration, primarily focused on extracting resources to sustain its military campaigns, exacerbated the problem. While collecting taxes and requisitions in Pomerania, the Swedish army often paid for supplies and garrison costs with hastily minted copper
Plattenmünzen (plate money) or low-quality
Klippe coins, effectively forcing this unstable currency into local circulation. This created a dual system where official accounting might use a nominal
Reichsthaler value, but actual commerce relied on a chaotic mix of physically degraded and suspect coins, making trade difficult and prices volatile.
Furthermore, the legal and sovereign status of Pomerania was in flux, as Sweden held the territory under military occupation while negotiating its formal acquisition. This political uncertainty prevented the implementation of a coherent, long-term monetary policy. Consequently, the currency situation remained a patchwork of emergency measures, characterized by scarcity of good coin, widespread counterfeiting, and an economy heavily reliant on barter. The monetary disorder reflected the broader reality of a war-ravaged land where Swedish priorities were logistical survival, not economic stability for the local population.