Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Numismatics.hu
Context
Years: 1685–1696
Issuer: Hungary Issuer flag
Ruler: Leopold I
Currency:
(1526—1754)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Composition: Silver
Magnetic: No
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard209
Numista: #69865

Obverse

Description:
Curly-haired laureate bust right, plain border.
Inscription:
LEOPOLD·D·G· (XV) R·I·S·A·G·H·B·REX·
Script: Latin

Reverse

Inscription:
PATRONA·HVN GARIÆ·1690·

K B
Script: Latin

Edge

Mints

NameMark
KremnicaKB

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1685K-B
1690K-B
1691K-B
1692K-B
1693K-B
1694K-B
1695K-B
1696K-B

Historical background

In 1685, Hungary found itself in a complex and strained monetary situation, deeply entangled with the ongoing wars of reconquest against the Ottoman Empire. The Habsburg monarchy, ruling the Kingdom of Hungary, was financing a massive military campaign to reclaim territories lost for over 150 years. This immense expense was funded through heavy taxation and, crucially, the deliberate debasement of the silver coinage. The primary circulating coin, the silver tallér (thaler), was systematically minted with reduced silver content to create seigniorage profit for the imperial treasury, leading to widespread inflation and a loss of public trust in the currency.

The monetary landscape was further fragmented by the circulation of older, full-value coins alongside the new, debased issues, creating a chaotic multi-currency system. People hoarded the older, purer coins (like the lipcsei tallér from Leipzig), while the weaker new coins drove prices higher in a classic example of Gresham's Law ("bad money drives out good"). Additionally, various foreign coins, particularly Turkish akçe and Dutch leeuwendaalders, circulated in the recently liberated and still-contested regions, complicating trade and taxation. The Habsburg authorities struggled to impose a unified monetary standard across the war-torn kingdom.

This financial instability exacerbated the hardships of a population already suffering from warfare, displacement, and requisitions. The debasement acted as a hidden tax, eroding savings and disrupting economic recovery in the reclaimed territories. Consequently, the currency situation of 1685 was not merely a financial issue but a central factor in the strained relationship between the Hungarian estates and the Habsburg court, sowing seeds of economic grievance that would persist long after the military victories on the battlefield.
💎 Very Rare