(1855) • 1486:
Sigismund of Tirol issues his 31.93 g
Guldengroschen of 60
Kreuzers and .9375 fineness. • 1493: Switzerland issues its first Guldengroschen at
Bern. • 1499: Hungary issues the first Guldiner/Guldengroschen. It is the earliest year of issue with Arabic numerals on the coins in Hungary. • 1500: The first German
Guldengroschen is issued from
Saxony weighing 29.232 grams, or eight to a
Cologne Mark. • 1518: The first coin actually called a "Thaler" is minted in
Joachimsthal, Bohemia, Holy Roman Empire, also weighing 29.232 g. • 1524: The money ordinance
Reichsmünzordnung issued at
Esslingen is the first attempt at a standard currency system for the
Holy Roman Empire. It fixed the weight of the guldengroschen weight at 29.232 g (or 1/8th a
Cologne Mark, or 233.856 g), its fineness at 0.9375, and proposed it be divided into 21
groschen or 60
kreuzer. • 1534:
Saxony and Bohemia alter the fineness of their guldiners (or one-guilder coin) down from .9375 purity to .903 while maintaining the same coin weight, thus lowering the actual amount of pure silver in the coin. This made the imperial Guldengroschen worth more than the locally issued guldiner. • 1551: A new money ordinance is decreed in
Augsburg that lowered the guldengroschen's fineness to 0.882 but raised its weight to 31.18 g. Many German states begin to accept this standard guldengroschen, but valued higher at 24 groschen or 72 kreuzer, further reinforcing its separation from the accounting gulden defined as only 60 kreuzer. A huge variety of other accounting subdivisions of the coin prevailed throughout the Empire. • 1559: After the death of the Holy Roman Emperor
Charles V, yet another money ordinance is decreed at Augsburg, which discontinued the 72-kreuzer guldengroschen (minted at 8.533 to a Cologne Mark of fine silver) in favor of a 60-kreuzer "guldiner", or one-gulden coin, minted at 10.24 to a Mark. • 1566: Protestations over the disappearance of the
guldengroschen resulted in the issuance of the
Reichsthaler (known later as the
Speciesthaler), of weight 29.232 g and fineness 0.889 (hence, 9 Specie Reichsthalers issued to a
Cologne Mark of fine silver). While modestly lighter than the guldengroschen, its public acceptance at the same price of 24 groschen or 72 kreuzer (or 10.8 guilders to a Mark) doomed the then-underpriced guldiner. • 1618: The Reichsthaler was valued at 24 groschen, or 90 kreuzer, or 1 gulden on the eve of the
Thirty Years' War of 1618–1648 and the
Kipper und Wipper financial crisis which destroyed Germany's various monetary systems. • 1667: An
agreement made at the
Abbey of Zinna between Saxony,
Brandenburg, and
Brunswick-Lüneburg to help make the minting of small coins more economical than could be done under the old Augsburg ordinances led to the creation of a lower-valued Thaler, still worth 1 gulden or 90 kreuzer, but equal to of the original Speciethaler (or 10 Zinnaische thalers to a Cologne Mark of fine silver). Northern European states like Denmark, Hamburg and Lübeck acceded to this convention. • 1690: The Leipzig Money Convention met to deal with the poor quality of coinage in Saxony, Brandenburg, and Brunswick, as well as the limited acceptance of the 1667 Zinnaische standard. The agreement reached was to reduce the
North German thaler further to the Speciethaler, or 12 Leipzig thalers minted from a Cologne Mark of fine silver. The Leipzig standard eventually prevailed all over the Empire, with a variety of subdivisions still used by the different states for this thaler: 1 gulden, 90 kreuzer, 24
gutegroschen, 36 mariengroschen, etc. • 1750: This year saw yet another reduction in weight in the areas controlled by
Prussia,
Hesse, and
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel down to just 22.272 g and a .750 fineness. 14
Prussian thalers were minted from a Cologne mark of fine silver. • 1754: The monetary agreement between Austria and Bavaria in 1753 replaced the original Speciethaler by a new
Conventionsthaler, with ten to a Cologne Mark of fine silver (or 23.3856 g). Its weight was 28.06 g with a fineness of .833. This Conventionsthaler was worth 1
North German thalers, or 1.4
Prussian thalers, or 2
Austro-Hungarian florins, or 2.4
South German gulden. Over time this coin would spread into a large portion of central and southern Germany but not in Scandinavia. • From 1820: The Kronenthaler (a thaler with three or four crowns between the Burgundy cross), a coin first issued in 1754 by the
Austrian Empire for use in the
Austrian Netherlands (present-day Belgium), became widely adopted by various Southern German that the rate of to 2.7
South German gulden. The kronenthaler had a weight of 29.45 g and a fineness of .873. • From 1837: the Prussia-led
Zollverein customs union led to a more vigorous transition into the Prussian currency standard, with North German thalers being replaced by lower-valued Prussian thalers worth 14 to a Cologne Mark of fine silver (or 16.704 g), and with each thaler then divided into 30 silbergroschen. The Prussian thaler was also fixed at 1
South German gulden. • 1857: The Vienna monetary contract finally eliminates the Cologne Mark as a standard against which the silver coinage of Austria and Germany are reckoned, replacing it with a simple tariff of 500 g fine silver. 30
Vereinsthalers are set to be minted from this 500 g standard (hence 16.67 g fine silver, or weight 18.52 g .900 fine). The Vereinsthaler was made equal to 1
Austro-Hungarian florins, 1
South German gulden, 30 silbergroschen, and other subdivisions. • 1873: The
gold standard was adopted by the newly unified
German Empire, with the silver Vereinsthaler remaining unlimited legal tender at three
gold marks despite its bullion value dropping below three gold marks over the next several years. • 1908: The Vereinsthaler was officially demonetised in Germany and made worth only bullion value. ==See also==