Berne thaler
The Berne Thaler was a coin equivalent to the French silver écu (German: laubthaler) issued by the Swiss Canton of Bern. It contained 26.67 g fine silver and was valued at 4 livres.
The currency of Bern was the livre (later, franc or frank), divided into 10 batzen or 40 kreuzer.
The laubthaler or écu was also equivalent to 4 franken of the Helvetic Republic, and afterwards to 4 Berne franken and 4 Vaud francs.
Coins
In the late 18th century, billon coins were issued in denominations of 1⁄2 and 1 Kreuzer, 1⁄2 and 1 Batzen, together with silver 10 and 20 Kreuzer, 1⁄4, 1⁄2 and 1 Thaler, and gold 1⁄2, 1 and 2 Duplone. The 1⁄2 Kreuzer coins were inscribed as 1 Vierer. Additionally, French écus were counterstamped '40 BZ' (40 batzen) in Bern for local use.[1]
References
- ^ "40 Batzens, Bern".
- Krause, Chester L.; Clifford Mishler (1991). Standard Catalog of World Coins: 1801–1991 (18th ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 0873411501.
- v
- t
- e
- Norwegian speciedaler (1816)
- Baden thaler (1821)
- Danish West Indian daler (1849)
- Vereinsthaler (1857)
- Mecklenburg
- Prussia
- Hesse-Kassel
- Hannover
- Greenlandic rigsdaler (1874)
- Westphalian thaler (1807)
- Bremen thaler (1740)
- Maria Theresa thaler (1741)
- Conventionsthaler (1754)
- Hanoverian thaler (1754)
- Kronenthaler (1755)
- Prussian thaler (1750)
- Danish rigsdaler (late 18C)
- Danish West Indian rigsdaler (1784)
- Danzig thaler (18C?)
- Hesse-Kassel thaler (18C?)
- Mecklenburg thaler (18C?)
- Norwegian rigsdaler (late 18C)
- Saxon thaler (18C?)
- Bancothaler (1619)
- North German thaler (1690)
- Speciesthaler (1622)
- Swedish riksdaler (1604)
- Wechselthaler (1670)
- Reichsguldiner (1559)
- Reichsthaler (1566)
- Dutch rijksdaalder (late 16C)
- Swiss Confederacy
- Stolberg thaler (late 15C)
- Wendenthaler (16C)
- {{Groschen}}
- {{Gulden}}
- {{Pfennig}}
This article about a unit of currency is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e