1802 AD., Kremnitz in Hungary, Austro-Hungarian Empire, Kremnica mint, 7 Kreuzer, KM 2129.
Austro-Hungarian Empire, Kremnitz in Hungary (mintmark "B"), 1802 AD.,
7 Kreuzer (26 mm / 4,17 g), mintage 102.034.000 , originally 4,68 g, 0,250 silver,
Obv.: FRANC. II. - D. G. R. IMP. - S. A. G. HV. - B. REX. A. A. , around rhomb containing crowned double eagle and value mark V - II on both sides.
Rev.: 7 / 1802 / B , in a rhomb with crossed branches.
KM 2129 .
overstruck on 1795 dated 12 kreuzer pieces KM 2137, on the eagle you can see traces of two 1795s of the underlying coin: a ..795 left and 179.. right
The Turkish and Napoleonic Wars lead to token issues in various denominations. These included a 12 Kreuzer coin which only contained 6 Kreuzer worth of silver and was later overstruck to produce a 7 Kreuzer coin. In 1807, copper coins were issued in denominations of 15 and 30 Kreuzer by the Wiener Stadt Banco. These issues were tied in value to the bank's paper money. The coinage returned to its prewar state after 1814. Between 1759 and 1811, the Wiener Stadt Banco issued paper money denominated in Gulden. However, the banknotes were not tied to the coinage and their values floated relative to one another. Although the notes did have a slight premium over coins early on, in later years, the notes fell in value relative to the coins until their value was fixed in 1811 at one fifth of their face value in coins. That year, the Priviligirte Vereinigte Einlösungs und Tilgungs Deputation ("Privileged United Redemption and Repayment Deputation") began issuing paper money valued at par with the coinage, followed by the "Austrian National Note Bank" in 1816.