Mecklenburg thaler
The Thaler was the currency of the two Duchies, later Grand Duchies, of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz until 1857. It was replaced the Mecklenburg Vereinsthaler at par. From the 1750s it was identical to the Hanoverian thaler at 1/12 a Cologne Mark of fine silver. From 1848, it was equal to the Prussian Thaler at 1/14 a Mark.[1]
The thaler was subdivided into 48 Schillinge, each of 12 Pfenninge.
References
- ^ Mar, Alexander Del (1895). History of Monetary Systems: Record of Actual Experiments in Money Made by Various States of the Ancient and Modern World, as Drawn from Their Statutes, Customs, Treaties, Mining Regulations, Jurisprudence, History, Archæology, Coins, Nummulary Systems, and Other Sources of Information. C.H. Kerr. p. 374.
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Thaler
- 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}}
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