¼ Stüber - Clemens August
Issuer Cologne, Archbishopric of
Type Standard circulation coins
Obverse
Crowned monogram. Monogram of Clement August of Bavaria belonging to the House of Wittelsbac.
Lettering: CAC
Reverse
Name and date, legend around.
Lettering: CHUR COLLN LAND MUNTZ ¼ STÜBER 1745
Technical Details
Obverse Lettering
CAC
Reverse Lettering
CHUR COLLN LAND MUNTZ ¼ STÜBER 1745
Market Prices by Year
Date | 1745 |
---|---|
Mint | - |
Mintage | 672,000 |
G | - |
VG | - |
F | 13.00EUR |
VF | - |
XF | - |
AU | - |
UNC | - |
Comments
Some coins were struck with V in STÜBER.
The Electorate of Cologne—not to be confused with the larger Archdiocese of Cologne—was one of the major ecclesiastical principalities of the Holy Roman Empire. The city of Cologne as such became a free city in 1288 and the archbishop eventually moved his residence from Cologne Cathedral to Bonn to avoid conflicts with the Free City, which escaped his jurisdiction.
After 1795, the archbishopric's territories on the left bank of the Rhine were occupied by France, and were formally annexed in 1801. The Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803 secularized the rest of the archbishopric, giving the Duchy of Westphalia to the Landgraviate of Hesse-Darmstadt. As an ecclesial government, however, the archdiocese remained (more or less) intact: while she lost the left bank including the episcopal city itself, Cologne, to the new Diocese of Aachen established under Napoleon's auspices, there still remained a substantial amount of territory on the right bank of the Rhine. After the death of the last Elector-Archbishop in 1801, the see was vacant for 23 years, being governed by vicar capitular Johann Herrmann Joseph v. Caspars zu Weiss and, after his death, by Johann Wilhelm Schmitz. In 1821, the archdiocese regained Cologne and the right bank of the Rhine (though with a new circumscription reflecting the Prussian subdivisions) and, in 1824, an archbishop was established there again. It remains an archdiocese to the present day, considered the most important one of Germany.