In 1859, the Austrian Empire's currency system was a complex and fragile structure, still grappling with the aftermath of the 1848 Revolutions and the costly Crimean War neutrality. The official currency was the
Conventionsthaler and the
Gulden (or Florin), which was divided into 60 Kreuzer. However, the empire did not operate on a pure metallic standard. Since 1857, it had been part of the
Vienna Monetary Treaty with most German states, which aimed to create a common silver-based currency area. This treaty established the
Vereinsthaler as a common coin, but Austria's adherence was more theoretical than practical, as it struggled to maintain sufficient silver reserves.
The reality was a state of
chronic fiscal distress and paper money inflation. To finance its military campaigns, particularly the ongoing
Second Italian War of Independence against France and Piedmont-Sardinia in 1859, the Habsburg state heavily relied on printing paper money. The central bank, the
Privilegierte Österreichische Nationalbank, was not independent and was compelled to provide large advances to the government. This led to a significant expansion of paper banknotes (
Bankozettel) not fully backed by specie, causing their value to depreciate against silver and gold. A wide and fluctuating gap emerged between the face value of paper Gulden and their much lower value in metallic coinage.
Consequently, the empire suffered from a
dual currency system and a severe loss of confidence. While obligations were nominally in silver Gulden, daily transactions were increasingly conducted in depreciated paper money, creating economic uncertainty and hampering trade. The costly war of 1859 exacerbated this crisis, draining the treasury and leading to a further increase in debt and money printing. This precarious financial situation set the stage for the impending state bankruptcy and sweeping monetary reforms that would follow Austria's military defeat later that year, culminating in the
1867 compromise and the eventual adoption of the gold standard.