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Denier - Leopold VI Enns

Issuer Duchy of Austria
Year 1198-1230
Type Standard circulation coin
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Obverse description A winged angel figure depicted kneeling to the left, rendered in high relief in the robust Romanesque style characteristic of early Austrian bracteate-influenced pfennigs. The figure holds a long cross before it, with wings partially spread behind. The design is set within a plain inner circle, the broad irregular flan showing typical characteristics of hand-struck medieval coinage. No legend is present.
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Mintage ND (1198-1230)
Additional information

Leopold VI ruled Austria and Styria simultaneously from 1194, and his reign saw Enns function as one of the duchy's principal minting sites. The Enns mint had roots going back to the Babenberg consolidation of coinage rights, and deniers from this facility circulated widely across the eastern Alpine trade routes connecting the Danube corridor to the Adriatic. Leopold's coinage policy was shaped in part by his need to finance crusading activity — he participated in both the Fifth Crusade and campaigns in southern France against the Albigensians.

CNA B 122 is among the more frequently encountered Babenberg denier types, though condition varies sharply due to thin planchets prone to irregular striking.

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