1 Ducat    (Venduta per $345.0)

1727, Kingdom of Hungary, Emperor Charles VI. Gold Ducat Coin. Kremnitz mint!

Mint Year: 1727
Denomination: Gold Ducat
Mint Place: Kremnitz (K-B)
Reference: Friedberg 171, KM-291.
Condition: Pierced, lightly deformed (not creased), otherwise about VF!
Material: Pure Gold (.986)
Diameter: 23mm
Weight: 3.42gm

Obverse: Standing crowned figure of Emperor Charles VI holding cross-topped orb and scepter right. Mint initials (K-B) in fields.
Legend: CAROLVS . VI . D : G - R : I : S : A : G : H : H : B : R .

Reverse: Madonna with child stepped on crescent and surrounded by ray of light. Crowned shield of Hungary below.
Legend: PATRONA REGNI (crowned hungarian shield) HVNGARIAE 1727 .

Kremnica (Kremnitz) mint was established in 1328 when Kremnica was promoted to a free royal town by the Hungarian King Charles Robert of Anjou. One of first coins made in this mint was called ducats. Kremnica ducats were well-known because of its good quality and considered the hardest currency in Central Europe. Available historical records report that 21.5 million ducats were minted in Kremnica mint throughout its history. The aggregate value of this amount, measured at today's prices of gold, would be one billion US dollars (exclusive of the historical value).

Charles VI (German Karl VI) (October 1, 1685 – October 20, 1740) was Holy Roman Emperor, King of Bohemia (as Karel II.) and Hungary (as Károly III.) from 1711 to 1732. From 1703 to 1711 he was an active claimant to the throne of Spain as Charles III.

Charles was born in Vienna, the second son of the Emperor Leopold I and of his third wife, Princess Eleonore-Magdalena of Palatine-Neuburg. He was given the baptismal names Karl Franz Joseph Wenceslau Balthasar Johann Anton Ignatius. His tutor was Prince Anton Florian of Liechtenstein.

Charles was the contracted heir of the Spanish Habsburgs. When Charles II of Spain made Philip V his heir, Louis XIV violated the contract. The dispute for the crown of Spain led to the War of the Spanish Succession.

After his older brother the Emperor Joseph I died suddenly in 1711, Charles returned to Austria. He succeeded immediately as King of Hungary and King of Bohemia. Later that year he was elected Holy Roman Emperor in Frankfurt.

Although Charles seems to have been clumsy in political affairs, the Austrian monarchy reached its widest expansion during his reign. His superior army was defeated by Bosnians in year 1737 in Battle of Banja Luka.

He married Elisabeth, eldest daughter of Louis Rudolph, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg. At the time of his death, his only surviving children were Maria Theresa and Maria Anna, so he had no living male heirs - a situation he had guarded against in the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713, which stated that his realm could not be divided and allowed that daughters also could inherit the throne from their fathers. When he died, the War of the Austrian Succession took place, but in the end the Pragmatic Sanction held up and his daughter succeeded him as Queen of Hungary and Bohemia and Archduchess of Austria. However, being a female, she was not elected Holy Roman Empress. Instead, Charles VII was elected. However, after Charles VII's reign, Maria Theresa's husband Francis III Stephen, Duke of Lorraine, was elected, ensuring that the Empire would continue in the Habsburg line.

Probably as a consequence of his years in Spain, he introduced the Spanish court ceremonial (Spanisches Hofzeremoniell) in Vienna and built the Spanish Riding School. Furthermore, the Reichskanzlei ("chancellory of the state") and the National Library were constructed during his reign and the Michaeler tract added to the Hofburg. Much was designed in baroque style in Vienna during Charles' reign.

He also had musical ambitions. Taught as a boy by Johann Joseph Fux, he composed, played the harpsichord, and now and then conducted the court's band.

There is some evidence that Charles' death was caused by consuming a meal of death cap mushrooms.

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Questo articolo è stato venduto per   $345.0 / 2016-01-23

Transaction details: https://www.hobbyray.com/page-cache/0f6f91f9cdc54b4e9011e486334ec2d4.html
Postato da: anonymous
2016-01-17
Gruppo Monete
 Denominazione: 1 Ducat
 Metallo: Oro
 Stato: Ungheria (1989 - )
 Persona: Carlo VI del Sacro Romano Impero (1 ...
 
Descrizione:   English
Variazioni delle monete: 16 pezzi
Prezzi: 15 pezzi
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