Split Stockholm mint into two

8 mensajes • visto 68 veces

Este tema se publicó en el foro en inglés.

Este mensaje tiene como objetivo: solicitar la creación o la modificación de una casa de moneda

Estado: Empezado
Votos a favor: 0
Votos en contra: 0

https://en.numista.com/catalogue/mint.php?id=5304

 

1.

Stockholm (the city)

Dates of operation (1340-1522)

https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm

 

2.

Stockholm Mint (Stadsholmen)

Dates of operation (1523-1855)

https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stadsholmen

 

Source:

https://swemynt.se/gv-stockholm/
Retrieved 31.03.2026

Interrested in nordic numismatic history, and european history overall.

Always looking for damaged, holed or even unidentifyable coins.

Your source page doesn't contain the string Stadsholmen.

bjherbison

Your source page doesn't contain the string Stadsholmen.

My apologies, the Stadsholmen island used to have a section named after the mint, which is how it is detirmed later where the mint was originally located.

https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mynttorget

Interrested in nordic numismatic history, and european history overall.

Always looking for damaged, holed or even unidentifyable coins.

I think the best way to do this is:

1. Take the current mint listing and change it to Stockholm (Stadsholmen)

2. Create the new mint Stockholm (Medieval) for the earlier mint.

 

This will minimize the number of edits to the mint field, as I count something like 50 early coins that will need to be edited to add the new mint.

 

Let me know if OK to proceed like this.

Estado cambiado a empezado (tdziemia, 4 abr 2026, 20:59)

I'm not convinced of two mints.

Perhaps the mint changed from local coinage to the central mint of the new kingdom of sweden.

I am not sure our Guidelines are very explicit on this kind of question.

 

From an “institutional” viewpoint, if it is the royal or national mint and its location changes within Stockholm, we do not necessarily need to split it.  Many mints have changed location within a city over time.  For example, the United States mint in Philadelphia is in its 4th location since opening in 1792, but we treat it as a single mint.

 

On the other hand, if most numismatic references for Sweden consider these as two different mints, we can consider splitting them.    

tdziemia

From an “institutional” viewpoint, if it is the royal or national mint and its location changes within Stockholm, we do not necessarily need to split it. 

In that case, the stockholm mint from 1523 could be merged with the Kungsholmen mint from 1850 as the “Royal Swedish Mint”

https://en.numista.com/catalogue/mint.php?id=5989 

Interrested in nordic numismatic history, and european history overall.

Always looking for damaged, holed or even unidentifyable coins.

I will ask @Jarcek  also to take a look and give an opinion.  

 

If I understand correctly, we have the Swedish Royal Mint having operated at three different locations in what is currently Stockholm, and the question is whether we just list one mint or three.

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