- The
Guldengroschen or
Guldiner was a
large silver coin
originally minted in
Tirol in 1486, but
which was
introduced into the
Duchy of
Saxony in 1500. The...
- 1520.
While the
first standard coin of the Holy
Roman Empire was the
Guldengroschen of 1524, its longest-lived coin was the Reichsthaler,
which contained...
-
grams of silver) of the
Reichsthaler specie and its predecessor, the
Guldengroschen; as well as the
Gulden currency unit used
before 1618. The
history of...
- be the
model for a
standardised German currency in the form of the
Guldengroschen,
which also
weighed 1
German ounce of
silver or 29.232 g (0.9398 ozt)...
-
Rhenish gulden (Rheinischer Gulden) in 1524. It also
defined a
silver Guldengroschen of
equal value to the gulden.: 363-367 : 364-365 The
standards of the...
- coinage, with 72
Kreuzer being equivalent to a Gulden, or a
silver Guldengroschen. The
silver Taler was set at 68 Kreuzer. An
official Reichsgoldgulden...
-
official "gold Gulden" (as
opposed to the
silver Guldengroschen)
during the 16th
century Guldengroschen (Silbergulden): a
silver coin
defined as having...
- efimok [ru],
yefimok (ефимок). The
predecessor of the
Joachimsthaler was the
Guldengroschen or
Guldiner which was a
large silver coin
originally minted in Tirol...
-
first really large and
heavy silver coin in
nearly a millennium, the
guldengroschen,
which the
Habsburgs in
Bohemia developed later into the thaler. This...
-
Saxon Guldengroschen,
later called the Klappmützenthaler,
minted in Annaberg/Frohnau and
probably also in
Wittenberg followed. A
Saxon Guldengroschen contained...