Logo Title
obverse
reverse
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Context
Year: 1851
Country: Austria Country flag
Currency:
(1754—1857)
Demonetization: 31 December 1858
Total mintage: 7,173,036
Material
Diameter: 30 mm
Weight: 16.41 g
Thickness: 3 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard2193
Numista: #18826

Obverse

Inscription:
K·K·OESTERREICHISCHE SCHEIDEMÜNZE·
Translation:
K.K. Austrian small change.
Script: Latin
Language: German

Reverse

Inscription:
3

KREUZER

1851

B
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1851
1851A
1851B7,173,000
1851C36
1851E
1851G

Historical background

In 1851, the Austrian Empire was grappling with the severe aftermath of the 1848-49 revolutions and a legacy of chronic fiscal instability. The state treasury was effectively bankrupt, burdened by massive debt from wartime expenditures and years of deficit financing. The primary circulating currency was the paper Gulden (Conventionsmünze), issued by the Wiener Stadtbank, but these notes were not convertible to silver and had lost significant value, trading at a steep discount to their nominal worth. This created a chaotic system of "agio," where daily exchange rates between paper and metallic coin caused economic uncertainty and hampered trade.

Emperor Franz Joseph's government, under Minister of Finance Karl Ludwig von Bruck, recognized that monetary reform was essential for economic recovery and state credibility. The pivotal Coinage Patent of 1851 was a decisive step toward establishing a new, unified silver standard. It legally defined the Vereinsthaler as a large silver coin and reintroduced the Conventionsthaler (also known as the Konventionsthaler or Speziesthaler), pegging the paper currency to a silver value. The aim was to restore public confidence by promising eventual convertibility, though this promise remained theoretical in the immediate term due to a lack of sufficient silver reserves.

Thus, the currency situation in 1851 was one of transition from discredited paper toward a promised metallic standard. While the legal framework for stability was created, the practical reality was a fragile and strained dual system. The success of the reform hinged on future fiscal discipline and the accumulation of specie, a challenge that would only be partially met with the full introduction of the Austrian Florin (Gulden) on a silver standard in 1858. The period therefore represents a critical, yet still precarious, juncture in the Empire's long struggle for monetary order.

Series: 1851 Austrian Empire circulation coins

¼ Kreuzer obverse
¼ Kreuzer reverse
¼ Kreuzer
1851
½ Kreuzer obverse
½ Kreuzer reverse
½ Kreuzer
1851-1856
1 Kreuzer obverse
1 Kreuzer reverse
1 Kreuzer
1851
2 Kreuzers obverse
2 Kreuzers reverse
2 Kreuzers
1851
3 Kreuzer obverse
3 Kreuzer reverse
3 Kreuzer
1851
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