Austrian Netherlands kronenthaler
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/41/1770_Burgundian_Cross_scan4036.jpg/100px-1770_Burgundian_Cross_scan4036.jpg)
Burgundian Cross with 4 crowns
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5b/1770_Kronenthaler_scan4039.jpg/100px-1770_Kronenthaler_scan4039.jpg)
Eagle and arms
Maria Theresia Kronenthaler in 1770
The kronenthaler was the currency of the Austrian Netherlands since 1755. It was equivalent to 216 liards, 54 sols, 54 stuivers, or 2.7 gulden.[1] During the Brabant Revolution in the Austrian Netherlands in 1789–90, it was briefly replaced with a short-lived revolutionary currency. Following the French occupation of the Austrian Netherlands in 1794, the Kronenthaler was replaced by the French franc.
Though legally valued at just 2.675 gulden in the Netherlands and 2.64 gulden several Southern German states, its acceptance at these places for 2.7 gulden created havoc in the valuations of the Dutch gulden and the South German gulden; see Kronenthaler.
See also[]
- Kronenthaler
- Coinage of the United States of Belgium (1790)
References[]
- ^ Craig, William D. (1976). "Low Countries". Coins of the world, 1750–1850. Wisconsin: Racine. pp. 351–2. ISBN 0-307-09363-8.
Categories:
- Crown (currency)
- Thaler
- Austria–Belgium relations
- Early Modern currencies
- Currencies of Belgium
- Economic history stubs
- Currency stubs
- European history stubs
- Belgium stubs
- Austrian history stubs