Coins from the City of Hagenau

Due to the erosion of royal power in the 10th century, some mints were taken over by local lords, secular or ecclesiastical. When Hugh Capet arrived on the throne, he mastered the minting only on the royal domain, around Paris and Orleans. Elsewhere, the right of minting is possessed by various political powers: at the level of the duchy, for example in Normandy, or at the level of local lords, such as the lords of Bourbon in Auvergne. The monetary types are nevertheless stable: the lords do not dare to change an existing type in order to preserve trust. The royal monograms in particular (that of Charles the Bald or Louis IV Transmarinus) are still minted until the end of the 12th century. But with the multiplication of these immobilized types, it happens that the engravers lose the understanding and we observe progressive degenerations of the types and legends. For two centuries, the successors of Hugh Capet enlarged the royal domain and gradually imposed the pre-eminence of royal coinage. During the 13th century, the kings of France, in particular Saint Louis and Philip the Fair, legislated to limit the circulation of feudal coins that gradually disappeared until the first half of the 14th century. The end of the Hundred Years’ War made it possible to establish a stable royal coinage and the policy of Louis XI established even more clearly the monetary hold of the king over the whole kingdom. After the introduction at the end of the 15th century of precious metals from America and the Italian art of the medal, only a few large families and exceptional enclaves within the kingdom still benefit from their own mint. The king became the undisputed master of money.
Wikidata: Q22730

Display options23 results found.
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Pfennig

Obol or Heller (shield)
ND (1600-1612)

Billon • 0.20 g • ⌀ 13.2 mm
E&L# 100, N# 193912
Obol or Heller (letter H)
ND (1600-1612)

Silver • 0.22 g • ⌀ 14 mm
KM# 15, E&L# 95, N# 217430
Obol or Heller
ND (1600-1612)

Silver • 0.35 g • ⌀ 13 mm
KM# 40, E&L# 98, N# 124902
Denier (Flower and Eagle)
ND (1215-1250)

Silver • 0.47 g • ⌀ 12 mm
Nessel# 22-24, E&L# 3-5, N# 124884

Thaler

Kreuzer - Leopold I
1664-1671

Silver • 0.55 g • ⌀ 16 mm
KM# 50, E&L# 91, N# 124913
2 Kreuzer - Ferdinand II
1625

Silver • 0.87 g • ⌀ 19 mm
KM# 41, E&L# 64, N# 124909
Double Kreuzer - Leopold I
1664-1668

Silver • 0.99 g • ⌀ 19.8 mm
KM# 51, E&L# 84, N# 124916
Triple Kreuzer - Rudolf II
1600-1610

Silver • 1.61 g • ⌀ 22 mm
KM# 6, E&L# 20, N# 124891
Triple Kreuzer - Matthias I
ND (1612-1619)

Silver • 1.32 g
KM# 25, N# 124893
Batzen - Ferdinand II
ND (1619-1621)

Silver • 2.62 g • ⌀ 24 mm
KM# 36, E&L# 46, N# 124896
12 Kreuzer - Leopold I (baroque shield)
1665

Silver • 4.83 g
E&L# 70, KM# 53, N# 124924
12 Kreuzer - Ferdinand II (Small Arms)
1621 (1621-1622)

Silver • 2.98 g
KM# 37, E&L# 51, N# 124897
12 Kreuzer - Ferdinand II (Large Arms)
1625-1626

Silver • 4.22 g • ⌀ 29 mm
KM# 42, E&L# 56, N# 124912
12 Kreuzer - Leopold I (simple shield)
1665-1669

Silver • 5.25 g • ⌀ 27 mm
KM# 52.1, E&L# 83, N# 124918
12 Kreuzer - Leopold I (indented shield)
ND (1665-1673)

Silver • 4.81 g • ⌀ 28 mm
KM# 58, E&L# 90, N# 124922
¼ Thaler called Dicken
ND (1600-1621)

Silver • 7.34 g • ⌀ 29 mm
KM# 28.1, E&L# 37-42, N# 124895
½ Florin or Thaler - Leopold I
1668-1671

Silver • 9.61 g • ⌀ 31.5 mm
KM# 56, E&L# 87, N# 121453
Thaler - Leopold I
1665

Silver • 29.03 g • ⌀ 42 mm
KM# 54, Dav ECT# 5334, E&L# 69, N# 176976
Silver Florin or Guldenthaler - Leopold I (Type 1)
1668-1669

Silver • 19.10 g
KM# 57, Dav ECT# 532, E&L# 86, N# 124921
Silver Florin or Guldenthaler - Leopold I (Type 2)
1673

Silver • 19.21 g • ⌀ 36 mm
KM# 66, Dav ECT# 533, E&L# 93, N# 124923

Unspecified currency

1 Guilder
ND (1375-1500)

Gold • 3.44 g • ⌀ 22 mm
Fr# 133e, E&L# 74/3, N# 369680

The Numista referee for coins of this issuer is Compendium.

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