Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Macho & Chlapovič a.s.
Context
Years: 1677–1685
Issuer: Hungary Issuer flag
Ruler: Leopold I
Currency:
(1526—1754)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 24 mm
Weight: 3.57 g
Silver weight: 3.57 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver
Magnetic: No
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard190
Numista: #48206
Value
Bullion value: $10.29

Obverse

Description:
Small portrait right in beaded circle; value in Roman numerals below in frame touching inner pearl circle. Bohemian royal title.
Inscription:
LEOPOLDVS · D · G · R · I (VI) · S · A · G · H · B · REX ·
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Glorified, uncrowned Madonna and Child on right arm. NB mintmark in inner circle, date ends inscription.
Inscription:
S · IMMACVLATA · V · MAR MAT · DEI · PAT · H · 1677 ·
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1677NB
1678NB
1680N
1685NB

Historical background

In 1677, the currency situation in the Kingdom of Hungary was one of profound instability and debasement, a direct consequence of its position on the front line of the Habsburg-Ottoman wars. The ongoing conflict, particularly the Great Turkish War which would formally begin a few years later, placed an enormous financial strain on the Habsburg monarchy. To fund military campaigns and fortifications, the imperial authorities in Vienna repeatedly resorted to debasing the silver coinage minted for circulation in Hungary, notably the denarius (denár). This resulted in a severe loss of precious metal content, causing the coins' intrinsic value to plummet far below their nominal face value.

This monetary decay triggered a classic "bad money drives out good" scenario (Gresham's Law). Older, higher-silver coins were hoarded, melted down, or exported, leaving only the poor-quality new coins in daily circulation. The situation was exacerbated by the circulation of a multitude of foreign coins, including Ottoman akçe and Dutch leeuwendaalders, as well as a flood of even more debased counterfeit coins. This chaotic multi-currency system led to wildly fluctuating exchange rates, rampant inflation, and a deep crisis of trust, severely disrupting trade and market transactions within the war-ravaged kingdom.

The Habsburg financial administration's attempts to rectify the situation, such as the currency regulations proposed by the Chamber of Szepes (Spiš), were largely ineffective in the face of relentless military expenditure. Thus, in 1677, Hungary's currency was not a tool of economic unity but a symptom of its distress: a destabilized, heterogeneous, and degraded medium of exchange that reflected the kingdom's battered state between the hammer of the Imperial treasury and the anvil of Ottoman military pressure. This instability would persist until more comprehensive reforms were attempted under Leopold I in the early 1690s.
Legendary