Counting tokens (rechenpfennig)

Counting token (German: rechenpfennig, French: jeton) - a metal mark for counting accepted in ancient and medieval times using a counting board (abacus).
Counting method:
Tokens are laid out in lines, with their value increasing from bottom to top: the bottom line is the line of units; the second, or the one following it, is the line of tens; the third is the line of hundreds; the fourth is the line of thousands, and so on.
The counter in the first line represents only 1, in the second line it represents 10, in the third – 100, in the fourth – 1,000, in the fifth – 10,000, etc. The counter placed between the first and second lines represents 5, between the second and third – 50, between the third and fourth – 500, etc., and in all cases it corresponds to five units of the rank whose line lies below it, and half the rank of the line that is located above it.

In the 13th century, counting tokens were first used in France and Italy, later in the Netherlands, and then spread throughout Europe. Rechenpfennigs were made in sizes from 20 to 28 mm, always with a low relief for ease of movement on the flat surface of the counting board.

During the Dutch Revolution (1568-1609), tokens with political texts and images were minted - their issue played a purely propaganda role.

Since the end of the 15th century, most of the counting tokens in Europe were minted in Nuremberg. In 1616, the City Council obliged all those who were engaged in the production of counting tokens to mint their name or initials on the product next to the inscription "counting token".
Over the centuries, almost all minters minted portraits of rulers of European powers on the obverse of the counting pfennigs, which also indicated where the main export of Nuremberg counting tokens went.

At the beginning of the 18th century in Europe, counting tokens finally lost their main purpose, but for a long time they were used as chips for gambling, checks in taverns or commemorative tokens.

 

 

Rechenpfennig by the types

1 figure

2 figures

3 figures

Alexander the Great

Angel

Ave Maria

Bird

Cornucopia

Deer

Eagle

Fish

Fountain

Frederick William III

George II

Horseman and horse

Imperial Orb

Joseph II

Leopold II

Lion

Louis XIII

Louis XIV

Louis XV

Louis XVI

Mercury

Minerva

Mountain

Napoleon I

Philip II

Plants

Scales

Ship

Sun

Tree

Venus

Wheel

Wolf

 

 

Rechenpfennig by the countries

France

Bretagne

Burgundy

Dauphiné

Lorraine

Lyon

No specific region

 

Germany

Clausthal

Heinrich Bonhorst (1674-1711)

Johann Wilhelm Schlemm (1753-1780)

 

Nuremberg

Hans Krauwinckel (1586-1635)

Kilian Koch (1585-1615)

Matheus Laufer (1612-1634)

Wolf Lauffer II (1612-1651)

Conrad Lauffer (1637-1668)

Cornelius Lauffer (1658-1711)

Johann Jacob Dietzel (1701-1748)

Wolf Hieronymus Hoffmann (1719-1756)

Münzprägeanstalt L. Chr. Lauer (18-20 century)

Anonymous

 

Stolberg

Julian Eberhard Volkmar Claus (1750-1765)

 

Zellerfeld

Johann Benjamin Hecht (1739-1763)

Johann Anton Pfeffer (1763-1773)

 

 

Netherlands

Dordrecht

 

 

Spanish Netherlands

Anonymous Tokens

Antwerp

Brussels