½ Thaler (Klippe; Victory) ND (1706) front ½ Thaler (Klippe; Victory) ND (1706) back
½ Thaler (Klippe; Victory) ND (1706) photo
© Classical Numismatic Group, Inc.

½ Thaler Klippe; Victory ND

1706 year
Silver 13.79 g -
Description
Issuer
Free imperial city of Nuremberg (German States)
Period
Free City (1219-1806) War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714)
Type
Circulating commemorative coin
Year
1706
Value
½ Thaler (⅝)
Currency
Reichsguldiner (1620-1753)
Composition
Silver
Weight
13.79 g
Size
40 × 40 mm
Shape
Square
Technique
Klippe
Orientation
Coin alignment ↑↓
Demonetized
Yes
Updated
2024-10-05
References
Numista
N#132284
Rarity index
100%

Reverse

Large solar eclipse; below, drooping fleurs-de-lis with petals falling off; all with double linear and laurel wreath border, six-petaled rosette at each angle.

Script: Latin

Lettering:
BAR // CELONA / / LIBERATA / / A.1706.12 MAI // ECLIPSIS SOL= // IS MADRI= // TVM.OCCVP. // m. MAI.
BRABAN // TIA.OCCVP. // m. MAI.
TIRLEMONT CLA=DES. m. MAI
GFN

Engraver: Georg Friedrich Nürnberger

Comment

Montenuovo 1344

This klippe was produced during the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714), in which France fought the Austrian Habsburgs to protect its claims on Spanish lands. Several nations, called the “Grand Alliance,” joined Austria in the fight against France. Britain, one of the Habsburgs’ allies, captured Barcelona in 1705. Soon after, the French besieged the town, prompting the British to send for reinforcements. In April of 1706, Dutch and British forces arrived and relieved the city. On 12 May 1706, as depicted on this klippe, a solar eclipse occurred, with its path passing directly over Spain and France. Especially during times of political upheaval, such events were very important to contemporary viewers, who tended to see them as a result of divine intervention and perhaps an omen relating to events in the temporal world. The members of the Grand Alliance, represented by the four crowns on the obverse of this issue, would have seen the solar eclipse as a harbinger of the demise of their enemy, the Sun King.

Interesting fact

One interesting fact about this coin is that it was minted to commemorate the victory of the Holy Roman Empire over the French in the War of the Spanish Succession, which lasted from 1701 to 1714. The coin's design features an image of a victorious angel holding a palm branch and a crown, symbolizing the triumph of the Holy Roman Empire.