Logo Title
Context
Years: 1701–1703
Issuer: Hungary Issuer flag
Ruler: Leopold I
Currency:
(1526—1754)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver
Magnetic: No
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard253
Numista: #48188

Obverse

Description:
Laureate bust with long curls facing right interrupts the top inscription. No inner circle; the face has a vale within a frame.
Inscription:
LEOPOLD· D · G · R · I (1) S · A · G · H · B · REX ·

Reverse

Description:
Madonna and child on either side of mint mark, small shield below. No inner beaded circle. Date above, following inscription.
Inscription:
PATRONA HUNG : GARIAE : 1701 .

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1701N
1703N

Historical background

In 1701, Hungary’s currency situation was deeply unstable and reflective of the kingdom’s turbulent political state. The country was divided, with the Habsburg monarchy controlling Royal Hungary, the Ottoman Empire holding the central plains, and the Principality of Transylvania acting as a semi-independent entity. This fragmentation led to a chaotic monetary landscape where various coins—Habsburg thalers and kreutzers, Ottoman akçe, and independent Transylvanian issues—all circulated simultaneously, causing confusion and facilitating debasement.

The primary currency in Habsburg-controlled territories was the silver thaler (or forint), but its value was under severe pressure. To finance the ongoing War of the Spanish Succession and the continuing conflicts against the Ottomans (the Great Turkish War had officially ended in 1699), the Vienna court frequently resorted to debasing the lower-value copper and silver kreutzer coins minted for Hungarian circulation. This practice, known as "coinage deterioration," increased the money supply to fund military expenses but triggered inflation and a loss of public trust, as the intrinsic metal value of coins fell below their face value.

Consequently, the year 1701 was marked by a stark disparity between "good" and "bad" money. Older, full-weight silver coins were hoarded or used for foreign trade, following Gresham’s Law that "bad money drives out good." This exacerbated economic hardship for the general population, particularly peasants paying taxes and rents, who often received degraded coinage while being required to pay in sound money. The monetary disorder thus mirrored the broader struggles of a war-ravaged and partitioned kingdom striving for economic coherence under Habsburg rule.

Series: 1701 Hungary circulation coins

1 Poltura obverse
1 Poltura reverse
1 Poltura
1701-1711
1 Kreuzer obverse
1 Kreuzer reverse
1 Kreuzer
1701-1703
¼ Thaler obverse
¼ Thaler reverse
¼ Thaler
1701-1704
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