Silber Etschkreuzer o.J. Aus dem Haus der Habsburger aus Österreich von Erzherzog Sigismund von Tirol 1439-1490

CHF 110.00

Auf Lager
Artikel-Nr.: Silber Etschkreuzer o.J. Aus dem Haus Habsburg

Silber Etschkreuzer o.J. Aus dem Haus der Habsburger, aus Österreich, von Erzherzog Sigismund von Tirol, der Münzreiche Regiert von 1439-1490. Lebensdaten: 1427-1496.  Erhaltung siehe Fotos, geprägt ?? in Hall oder Meran, um circa ?? 1477 -1490. Deute dieses Stück, ins Spätmittelalter.

 

Avers: Doppelkreuz. Beizeichen Raute.

 

Revers: Adler. Beizeichen Rosette. ?? Legenden: COMES. TIROL. SI GIS MUN DUS. 

 

Referenz Nummern: CNA 345 oder CNA J 45. Schulten 4430. Gewicht circa: 0.9gr, und etwa Durchmesser: 18-19mm. Garantiere die Echtheit der Münze. Herkunft Fachhandel CH. Siehe Foto, dort Zettel abfotografiert vom Vorbesitzer. Info ohne Gewähr.

 

Beispiel aus der Quelle: worthpoint.com. 1477, Archduke Sigismund of Austria. Silver Kreuzer (Tirolino) Coin. Privy Mark: Diamond Referencea: CNA 345. Mint Place: Hall (Tyrol) Mint Year: not dated (struck before 1744) Condition: Light deposits in reverse, otherwise F+ Denomination: Kreuzer (Tirolino or Etschkreuzer) Diameter: 17mm Material: Silver Weight: 1.05gm.

Avers: Crowned heraldic eagle with protruded tongue left. Legend: + COMES . * . TIROL.

Reverse: A long cross splitting legends and circle with a smaller cross placed over it in 45 degree angle. Diamond in field. Legend: + SI GIS MUN DUS (diamond).

In 1271, Meinhard II of Tyrol issued a coin in Meran which initially was known as zwanziger (twenty) or tirolino. It was also called Zwanziger (piece of twenty) because it was worth 20 Veronese denarii. On account of its distinctive cross of Lorraine on one side it was soon called kreuzer (from German Kreuz, meaning cross). Here, too, an example of the fact that the market needed larger and heavier coins for settling payments.

 

Important mints, such as Meran and later Hall, were set up in the Tyrol on account of the large deposits of ore. As a result of the extraordinary economic strength of the South Tyrol fairs the new currency spread rapidly. The kreuzer with its reliable value became the small silver coin of early modern times. Emperor Frederick III introduced the kreuzer into Austria and made it the starting point of the further development of Austrian coinage (4 Viennese pfennigs = 1 kreuzer). Kreuzers continued to be used up into the 19th century. Authenticity unconditionally guaranteed. ! Sigismund of Austria, Duke, then Archduke of Further Austria (October 26, 1427–March 4, 1496) was a Habsburg archduke of Austria and ruler of Tirol from 1446 to 1490. Sigismund (or Siegmund, sometimes also spelled Sigmund) was born in Innsbruck; his parents were Frederick IV, Duke of Austria and Anna of Brunswick. He was a first cousin of Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor.

 

In 1446, upon the death of his father, he acceded to rulership over Tirol and (other) Further Austria Vorderösterreich, which included the Sundgau in the Alsace, the Breisgau, and some possessions in Swabia. In 1449, he married Princess Eleanor of Scotland, the daughter of James I, King of Scots.For much of his reign, Sigismund was engaged in disputes with Nicholas of Cusa, then bishop of Brixen, for the control of the Eisack, Pustertal and Inn valleys. In 1460, when he had Nicholas imprisoned, he was excommunicated by Pope Pius II. The bishop fled to Todi, but died before the archduke surrendered in order to receive the papal pardon.In 1469, he sold his lands on the Rhine and in the Alsace to Charles, Duke of Burgundy. Sources are unclear whether he sold them due to his debts he had accumulated owing to his luxury lifestyle or just "rented" them because he wanted to have them protected better against the expansion of the Old Swiss Confederacy. In any case, he bought back these possessions in 1474, and together with the Swiss (with whom he had concluded a peace treaty in Konstanz) and the Alsatian cities, he sided against Charles in the Battle of Héricourt.

 

In 1477, Frederick III made him archduke. Three years later, Eleanor died, and 1484, Sigismund married the 16-year-old Katharina of Saxony, daughter of Albert, Duke of Saxony. He had no offspring from either marriage. In the later years of the 1470s and early 1480s Sigismund issued a decree that instituted a radical coinage reformation that eventually led up to the creation of the world's first really large and heavy silver coin in nearly a millennium, the guldengroschen, which the Habsburgs in Bohemia developed later into the thaler. This coin was the ancestor of many the major European coin denominations to come later. Using new mining methods and technology, the largely quiescent silver mines in Tirol were brought back into production and soon numerous surrounding. Info ohne Gewähr.

Silber Etschkreuzer o.J. Aus dem Haus der Habsburger aus Österreich von Erzherzog Sigismund von Tirol 1439-1490

CHF 110.00

Auf Lager
Artikel-Nr.: Silber Etschkreuzer o.J. Aus dem Haus Habsburg

Silber Etschkreuzer o.J. Aus dem Haus der Habsburger, aus Österreich, von Erzherzog Sigismund von Tirol, der Münzreiche Regiert von 1439-1490. Lebensdaten: 1427-1496.  Erhaltung siehe Fotos, geprägt ?? in Hall oder Meran, um circa ?? 1477 -1490. Deute dieses Stück, ins Spätmittelalter.

 

Avers: Doppelkreuz. Beizeichen Raute.

 

Revers: Adler. Beizeichen Rosette. ?? Legenden: COMES. TIROL. SI GIS MUN DUS. 

 

Referenz Nummern: CNA 345 oder CNA J 45. Schulten 4430. Gewicht circa: 0.9gr, und etwa Durchmesser: 18-19mm. Garantiere die Echtheit der Münze. Herkunft Fachhandel CH. Siehe Foto, dort Zettel abfotografiert vom Vorbesitzer. Info ohne Gewähr.

 

Beispiel aus der Quelle: worthpoint.com. 1477, Archduke Sigismund of Austria. Silver Kreuzer (Tirolino) Coin. Privy Mark: Diamond Referencea: CNA 345. Mint Place: Hall (Tyrol) Mint Year: not dated (struck before 1744) Condition: Light deposits in reverse, otherwise F+ Denomination: Kreuzer (Tirolino or Etschkreuzer) Diameter: 17mm Material: Silver Weight: 1.05gm.

Avers: Crowned heraldic eagle with protruded tongue left. Legend: + COMES . * . TIROL.

Reverse: A long cross splitting legends and circle with a smaller cross placed over it in 45 degree angle. Diamond in field. Legend: + SI GIS MUN DUS (diamond).

In 1271, Meinhard II of Tyrol issued a coin in Meran which initially was known as zwanziger (twenty) or tirolino. It was also called Zwanziger (piece of twenty) because it was worth 20 Veronese denarii. On account of its distinctive cross of Lorraine on one side it was soon called kreuzer (from German Kreuz, meaning cross). Here, too, an example of the fact that the market needed larger and heavier coins for settling payments.

 

Important mints, such as Meran and later Hall, were set up in the Tyrol on account of the large deposits of ore. As a result of the extraordinary economic strength of the South Tyrol fairs the new currency spread rapidly. The kreuzer with its reliable value became the small silver coin of early modern times. Emperor Frederick III introduced the kreuzer into Austria and made it the starting point of the further development of Austrian coinage (4 Viennese pfennigs = 1 kreuzer). Kreuzers continued to be used up into the 19th century. Authenticity unconditionally guaranteed. ! Sigismund of Austria, Duke, then Archduke of Further Austria (October 26, 1427–March 4, 1496) was a Habsburg archduke of Austria and ruler of Tirol from 1446 to 1490. Sigismund (or Siegmund, sometimes also spelled Sigmund) was born in Innsbruck; his parents were Frederick IV, Duke of Austria and Anna of Brunswick. He was a first cousin of Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor.

 

In 1446, upon the death of his father, he acceded to rulership over Tirol and (other) Further Austria Vorderösterreich, which included the Sundgau in the Alsace, the Breisgau, and some possessions in Swabia. In 1449, he married Princess Eleanor of Scotland, the daughter of James I, King of Scots.For much of his reign, Sigismund was engaged in disputes with Nicholas of Cusa, then bishop of Brixen, for the control of the Eisack, Pustertal and Inn valleys. In 1460, when he had Nicholas imprisoned, he was excommunicated by Pope Pius II. The bishop fled to Todi, but died before the archduke surrendered in order to receive the papal pardon.In 1469, he sold his lands on the Rhine and in the Alsace to Charles, Duke of Burgundy. Sources are unclear whether he sold them due to his debts he had accumulated owing to his luxury lifestyle or just "rented" them because he wanted to have them protected better against the expansion of the Old Swiss Confederacy. In any case, he bought back these possessions in 1474, and together with the Swiss (with whom he had concluded a peace treaty in Konstanz) and the Alsatian cities, he sided against Charles in the Battle of Héricourt.

 

In 1477, Frederick III made him archduke. Three years later, Eleanor died, and 1484, Sigismund married the 16-year-old Katharina of Saxony, daughter of Albert, Duke of Saxony. He had no offspring from either marriage. In the later years of the 1470s and early 1480s Sigismund issued a decree that instituted a radical coinage reformation that eventually led up to the creation of the world's first really large and heavy silver coin in nearly a millennium, the guldengroschen, which the Habsburgs in Bohemia developed later into the thaler. This coin was the ancestor of many the major European coin denominations to come later. Using new mining methods and technology, the largely quiescent silver mines in Tirol were brought back into production and soon numerous surrounding. Info ohne Gewähr.

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