First vintage issue of the sixpences of King Augustus II in beautiful state of preservation.
One of the few monetary issues minted for Poland by the first of the Saxons on the Polish throne. It was minted in defiance of the Pacta conventa, which forbade August II to mint crown coin outside Poland without the consent of the Sejm and the Senate. However, as T. Kalkowski points out - the king"not looking at this and knowing that the powerless Republic would not draw any consequences from this fact, immediately in 1698 he began minting Polish crown coin at the Leipzig mint." One of them were precisely the sixpences, which, after a trial issue in 1698, he minted on a larger scale in 1702.
On the reverse are the initials of E.P.H. - the Leipzig mintmaster Ernest Piotr Hecht.
A rarer and typologically sought-after coin.