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obverse
reverse
Warszawskie Centrum Numizmatyczne s.j.

6 Kreuzers – Duchy of Württemberg-Oels

Context
Years: 1708–1716
Country: Bohemia
Currency:
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 26 mm
Weight: 2.8 g
Silver weight: 2.80 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver
Magnetic: No
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard80
Numista: #122321
Value
Bullion value: $7.80

Obverse

Description:
Bust right, VI below.
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Silesian eagle in baroque oval, princely hat above date in margin.
Script: Latin

Edge

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1708CVL
1712CVL
1713CVL
1714CVL
1715CVL
1716CVL

Historical background

In 1708, the Duchy of Württemberg-Oels, a small Silesian territory ruled by a cadet branch of the House of Württemberg, faced a complex currency situation typical of the Holy Roman Empire's fragmented monetary landscape. The duchy did not possess its own independent minting rights (Münzregal) but operated within the broader economic and monetary sphere of the Kingdom of Bohemia, to which Silesia belonged. Consequently, the circulating currency was predominantly the Bohemian (or Saxon) Groschen and the Taler, with their value and silver content subject to regional agreements and imperial regulations.

The period was one of significant monetary instability across the Empire, exacerbated by the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714). Rulers often debased coinage to finance military expenditures, leading to inflation and a flood of inferior coins. While specific records for Württemberg-Oels in 1708 are scarce, the duchy would have been acutely affected by these empire-wide trends. The circulation of underweight coins from neighboring states and the resulting confusion in exchange rates between different regional currencies would have posed a constant challenge for trade and public administration.

Therefore, the currency situation in Württemberg-Oels in 1708 was characterized by dependency and vulnerability. The duchy’s monetary system was not autonomous but was subject to the standards and fluctuations of larger regional powers and the destabilizing imperial-wide practice of coinage debasement. This created an environment of economic uncertainty for its populace, who had to navigate a daily reality of multiple coin types with varying and often unreliable intrinsic values.
Legendary