Special Coinage Technique


Do these coins seem special to you? No? Then let's look at them from the other side.

You still don't find anything strange about them? Then look at the shape. The coin is a wheel. But this isn't a circle. It's part of a roll. The coins are somewhat convex.

Were the coins mishandled? Were the coins twisted during circulation? No. This is what they looked like at the time of their creation.

The shape of the coin is due to the minting technique of the time. If you can call it minting. I was taught that the Industrial Revolution began in the mid-XVIIIs at the earliest. But here I present coins that were struck by machine in the late 17th and early 18th centuries.

Can you imagine printing a newspaper? The roll is printed on a roll of paper. And that's also how coins were minted. The rolls were embedded with coin punches that were imprinted on both sides of the silver sheet. The two rolls with the coin punches ran against each other. The coins were then struck by an other punch. The remaining material was remelted and reused.

I'm not an English speaker. I've been playing with the translator on deepl.com. I don't know if the result is understandable. But the shape of the coin suggests what might have happened to it.

The method seemed very progressive. In reality, the stamps often did not fit together and the scrap was enormous. That's why the method was abandoned after about 50 years.

A classic view of coins.
1/2 Thaler, Kingdom of Bohemia, 1715, Charles VI. (as Roman Emperor), rulled 1711-1740, diameter 37 mm, weight 14.25 g of silver, purity 875/1000, Mint Kutná Hora, Coinmaster Bernard Wohnsiedler

15 Kreutzer, Kingdom of Hungary, 1689, Leopoldus II, rulled 1657-1705, diameter 30.3 mm, weight 6.44 g of silver, purity
563/1000, Mint Kremnica

Incidentally, Charles VI was the son of Leopold I. The family resemblance was not denied. Especially the lower "Habsburg Lip" is famous.

I'll show you two sixkretzer of Leopold I.

Damage to the first coin is a manufacturing defect.

The first coin is Silesian, the second Hungarian. For such old coins the price is not governed by the weight and purity of silver, but I will still give both values.

6 kreutzer, diameter 25 mm, weight of silver 2.68 g, purity 438/1000.

I post to #silverogoldstackers based on what I feel like and what I can think of that might be of interest to someone. I have no idea when I will write next or what I will write about.

Thank you for reading and for any support.



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18 comments
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You received an upvote of 100% from Precious the Silver Mermaid!

Thank you for contributing more great content to the #SilverGoldStackers tag.
You have created a Precious Gem!

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Those are great looking coins! I didn't realize they originally used a rolling press to mint coins. Thanks for the history lesson! I love it! 😁

!BBH
!DHEDGE

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Nice coins, too bad the guys aren't too pretty. Too much inbreeding? Great history, I appreciate it!
!BBH

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Inbreeding. It is bad? The Habsburgs often used it instead of wars. Wars are a greater evil to the people than degenerate monarchs.

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With a bit of a curl would make these coins easier to pickup of handle off the counter.

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The coins were not stacked properly. This is and has been a big problem for the Silvergoldstackers.

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A very cool, I would love to have one of these curves coins would be fairly easy to flatten them after they got punched out the roll but I guess that would be extra labour !BBH

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In earlier times, collectors really tried to press these coins. Coin production in general was interesting. I have several ancient and medieval pieces. Maybe I'll show them sometime. Their minting techniques were often remarkable.

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