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20 Stüber Siege currency

Features

Issuer City of Jülich (German States)
Type Emergency coinage › Siege coins
Conflict Eighty Years' War (1568-1648)
Year 1621
Value 20 Stüber
Currency Stüber
Composition Silver
Weight 8.88 g
Diameter 36 mm
Shape Round
Demonetized Yes
Number
N#
142860
References KM# 50
Standard Catalog of World Coins (86 volumes).
, Maillet# 16
Prosper Mailliet; 1868. Atlas de monnaies obsidionales et de nécessité. Imprimeur Gobbaerts, Brussels, Belgium.
, Noss Be# 525
Alfred Noss; 1929. Die Münzen von Jülich, Kleve, Berg und Mörs / Band 2. Die Münzen von Berg und Jülich-Berg = The Coinage of Jülich, Kleve, Berg and Mörs. Kress & Hornung, Munich, Bavaria, Germany.
, KOR# 291
Otto Kozinowski, Jürgen Otto, Hubert Ruß; 2005. Die Münzen des Fürsten- und Herzogtums Coburg von 1577 bis 1918. Hauck & Aufhäuser Privatbankiers, Munich, Bavaria, Germany (2 volumes).

Obverse

Large FP monogram (for Friedrich Pithan, governor of Jülich), six similar stamps surrounding but each containing the denomination.

Script: Latin

Lettering:
FP
·: I6ZI ·:·
· INGVL=
BELE=
G

FP
16Z1
4 S

Reverse

Blank.

Comments

When the last duke of Jülich-Kleves-Berg died in 1609, a controversy over his territory broke out. The Elector of Brandenburg and the Count of Neuburg entered an agreement in which they would split the territory between themselves. Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II was not happy with these terms. He sent Archduke Leopold V, his cousin, to serve as the administrator of the disputed duchy. Leopold set up his headquarters in the fortress at Jülich, which was handed over to him by Baron Johann von Reuschenberg. The fortress, now under the control of the Holy Roman Empire, was besieged in 1610 by a large force composed of nations hostile to the Habsburgs. This siege prompted Leopold and Johann von Reuschenberg to abandon Jülich. After the siege, the Count of Neuburg and Elector of Brandenburg put into effect their original plan to split the territory of Jülich-Kleves-Berg. They put the Dutchman Frederik Pithan in control of the fortress at Jülich. This, in effect, meant that the United Provinces controlled the fortress. In 1621, when the Dutch ceasefire with Spain expired, Spain invaded the United Provinces and besieged the Jülich fortress. After a costly siege, Spain took the fortress.

See also

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Date VG F VF XF AU UNC
1621  16z1

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