In 1719, Denmark operated under a silver standard, with the primary currency being the
rigsdaler specie, a large silver coin containing approximately 25.28 grams of fine silver. However, the monetary system was complex and strained. The state treasury, deeply indebted from the Great Northern War (1700-1721), faced severe liquidity problems. To finance its obligations, the government had repeatedly issued inferior subsidiary coins, such as the
rigsdaler courant, which traded at a significant discount to the silver
specie. This created a dual-currency system where daily transactions used depreciated coins, while large-scale trade and state contracts were anchored to the silver standard, leading to confusion and instability.
The year itself was part of a critical period of monetary reform initiated by King Frederik IV and his advisor, General War Commissioner
Johan Georg Holstein. In the preceding years, the state had attempted to recall and melt down debased coins, but these efforts were only partially successful. By 1719, the focus was on stabilizing the value of the
rigsdaler courant and managing the enormous national debt. The government was actively using the newly established
Kurantbanken (founded in 1736 but operating in precursor forms), a central bank-like institution, to issue credit notes and manage the currency, laying early groundwork for a more modern financial system.
Consequently, the currency situation in 1719 was one of
transition and fragility. While the silver
specie remained the theoretical anchor, the everyday economy relied on a paper and copper-backed currency whose value was politically managed and vulnerable to distrust. The pressures of wartime finance, a heavy debt burden, and the ongoing efforts to centralize and control the money supply defined the era, setting the stage for more structured reforms in the following decades under the absolutist monarchy.