The taler was originally a German coin equal to three
German marks, but the word taler became a common name for currency that,
in various guises, appeared in other languages and countries. The English word
dollar evolved from taler, as did the Italian tallero, the
Dutch daalder, and the Swedish and Danish dalers.
The first talers came from Jachymov, now a small village in the Ore Mountains
in the western part of the Czech Republic. At the opening of the sixteenth
century Jachymov fell within the Holy Roman Empire and was administered under
German authority. In 1516 the local ruler, Count Hieronymus Schlick, found a
silver deposit close to his home. As early as 1519 Count Schlick, without
official sanction, began minting silver coins in his castle, and on 1 January
1520 he received official approval to operate a mint. Minting silver into coins
was probably more profitable than merely selling silver. Between 1534 and 1536
King Ferdinand I ordered the construction of an imperial mint in Jachymov. The
building housing the imperial mint served as a museum as late as 1976.
The coins were first called Joachimstalergulden or
Joachimstalergroschen after the German name for the valley, Joachimsthal,
where they were minted. The names were shortened to talergroschen, and
later to thalers, or talers.
With the stimulus of silver mining, Jachymov blossomed into a bustling
community of 18,000 inhabitants. In 1568 a plague left its mark on this mining
community, but the most severe devastation was wrought by religious intolerance.
Jachymov became strongly Protestant, but the Bohemian monarchy was Catholic.
Religious persecution killed the community, which could only boast of 529
inhabitants in 1613, and in 1651 the government moved the official mint to
Prague.
In the first year of operation Count Schlick’s mint
struck about 250,000 talers. During the years of peak
production, between 1529 and 1545, the mines produced enough silver to mint 5
million talers. By the end of the century, Count Schlick’s mint had sent about
12 million talers into circulation.
The coinage of talers spread throughout the German-speaking world. During the
sixteenth century alone as many as 1,500 different types of talers found their
way into circulation from various German states and municipalities. By 1900 as
many as 10,000 different types of talers had been minted for metal currency and
commemoration medals.
Maria Theresa, a famous Austrian empress of the eighteenth century, gave her
name to the best known, longest circulating of all talers. In 1773 the Gunzburg
mint first struck a taler bearing the image of Maria Theresa. After her death in
1780 subsequent talers were always dated 1780. After the dissolution of the Holy
Roman Empire early in the nineteenth century the Austro-Hungarian Empire
continued to mint the Maria Theresa talers with the 1780 date. Following the
break up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire after World War I the Austrian Republic
minted talers until Hitler invaded in 1937. Mussolini found Maria Theresa talers
the favored coin in Ethiopia, causing Italy to mint its own talers between 1935
and 1937 in order to facilitate trade with Ethiopia. After World War II the
Republic of Austria resumed the coinage of talers, still bearing the date of
1780. Austria continued to mint talers until 1975.
See also:
References:
Nussbaum, Arthur. 1957. A History of the Dollar.
Weatherford, Jack. 1997. The History of Money.