Difference between revisions of "German States, Brunswick-Luneburg"

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(→‎six and twelve mariengroschen: added 1688, 1694 6 mariengroschen)
(→‎two thirds thaler: added 1715-HCB 2/3 thaler)
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* [[Luneburg 1702-JJJ 2/3 thaler]]
 
* [[Luneburg 1702-JJJ 2/3 thaler]]
 
* [[Hannover 1711-HB 2/3 thaler KM-67|1711-HB ⅔ thaler, leaping stallion, blank central escutcheon]]  
 
* [[Hannover 1711-HB 2/3 thaler KM-67|1711-HB ⅔ thaler, leaping stallion, blank central escutcheon]]  
 +
* [[Hannover 1715-HCB 2/3 thaler|1715-HCB ⅔ thaler, "leaping stallion" reverse]]
 
* [[Hannover 1716-HH 2/3 thaler|1716-HH "wild man" ⅔ thaler]]
 
* [[Hannover 1716-HH 2/3 thaler|1716-HH "wild man" ⅔ thaler]]
 
* [[Hannover 1716-HCB 2/3 thaler|1716-HCB ⅔ thaler, bust obverse]]
 
* [[Hannover 1716-HCB 2/3 thaler|1716-HCB ⅔ thaler, bust obverse]]

Revision as of 08:46, 24 March 2025

Hannover in 1789, from Putzger's atlas

Brunswick-Luneburg-Calenberg and Brunswick-Luneburg-Celle in the seventeenth century: Christian Ludwig was duke in Calenberg 1641-48 and in Celle 1648-65. His younger brother Georg Wilhelm was duke in Calenberg 1648-65 and in Celle 1665-1705. The last brother, Ernst August, was duke in Calenberg 1679-98 and elector of Hannover 1692-98. Ernst August's son George inherited Calenberg and Hannover in 1698, Celle in 1705 and the throne of Great Britain in 1714.

pfennig

one, two and four mariengroschen

six and twelve mariengroschen

24 mariengroschen

1/12 thaler and 1/8 thaler

1/6 thaler

quarter thaler

one third thaler

half thaler

two thirds thaler

one thaler

George I

George II

one and a quarter thaler

double thaler

three and four thaler

five thaler

ducats