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Denier - Theoderich

Issuer Bishopric of Basel
Year 1041-1055
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Weight 0.6 g
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Reverse description Plain or minimally decorated reverse surface consistent with hammered single-die or two-die striking technique common to 11th-century episcopal deniers of the Upper Rhine region. The flan edges are irregular, reflecting the hand-cut planchet preparation typical of this period. No distinct central motif is discernible, and the surface shows characteristic die-flow lines and flatness associated with primitive hammered coinage of the Bishopric of Basel.
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Edge Plain
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Additional information

Theoderich of Basel held the bishopric from 1041 to 1055 under Henry III, who granted or confirmed minting rights to the see as part of the broader Salian policy of anchoring imperial authority through loyal ecclesiastical lords. The Bishopric of Basel was a critical node along trans-Alpine routes, and its coinage — however light — was functional currency in a corridor that mattered strategically to the empire.

Michd Bâle#19 places this among a small group of attributable episcopal deniers from the period before Basel's mint output becomes more consistently documented in the twelfth century.

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