Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Numismatik Lanz Auctions

2 Thalers – Austrian Empire

Austria
Context
Years: 1625–1626
Country: Austria Country flag
Currency:
(1520—1754)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Weight: 56.9 g
Silver weight: 56.90 g
Shape: Klippe
Composition: Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Klippe
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard608
Numista: #94200
Value
Bullion value: $162.85

Obverse

Description:
Laureate bust right, lion head on shoulder, within a leafy circle; date above in legend.
Inscription:
FERDINANDVS // II D G RO I S A G H B REX 1626
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned arms in an oval shield with a small Styrian panther shield above, encircled by the Golden Fleece chain. The crown breaks the surrounding circle and legend.
Inscription:
ARCHI AVST DVX // BVR STYRIÆ ETC
Script: Latin

Edge

Mints

NameMark
Graz

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1625
1626

Historical background

In 1625, the currency system of the Habsburg Austrian Empire was in a state of profound crisis, a direct consequence of the immense financial strains of the ongoing Thirty Years' War (1618-1648). Emperor Ferdinand II’s military campaigns against Protestant forces and his allies, particularly the costly fight against the Danish intervention led by Christian IV, required vast sums of money that far exceeded ordinary tax revenues. This led to repeated debasements of the coinage, a process where the silver content in coins was reduced while their face value was maintained, creating a short-term profit for the imperial treasury but devastating the economy.

The primary unit, the Reichsthaler, was a standard silver coin, but its value was being undermined by the proliferation of lightweight and adulterated coins, especially the smaller Kreuzer and Groschen used in daily transactions. Different regions within the heterogeneous empire, such as the Austrian hereditary lands, Bohemia, and Hungary, also minted their own variations, leading to a chaotic multiplicity of circulating currencies with fluctuating exchange rates. This period saw the widespread minting of so-called Kipper- und Wipperzeit coinage (named for the practice of "tipping" good coins out of circulation), where profiteering mint masters and princes, often with official concessions, produced floods of nearly worthless small change, leading to rampant inflation and a collapse in public trust.

The government in Vienna recognized the destabilizing effects but was largely powerless to enact effective reform in the midst of wartime exigency. Debasement was a fiscal tool of necessity, not choice, to pay soldiers and suppliers. Consequently, the year 1625 falls within a broader era of monetary disorder where the value of money was highly unstable, creditors were ruined, prices soared, and the peasantry and lower classes bore the brunt of the economic hardship. True stabilization would only begin over a decade later with the Münzordnung (coinage ordinance) of 1635, which attempted to restore a standardized silver-based currency.
Legendary