New Year Bonus Coin Consignment Auction 4 of 5 Day 2
By Key Date Coins
Feb 3, 2023
148 Route 73 Suite 3-184 Voorhees, NJ 08043 USA, United States
The auction has ended

LOT 957:

1772-A Prussia 1/48 Thaler 1/48t KM-327 Grades g, good. Frederick II, byname Frederick the Great, German ...

Sold for: $5
Start price:
$ 5
Estimated price :
$25 - $100
Buyer's Premium: 18%
Auction took place on Feb 3, 2023 at Key Date Coins
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1772-A Prussia 1/48 Thaler 1/48t KM-327 Grades g, good. Frederick II, byname Frederick the Great, German Friedrich der Grosse, (born January 24, 1712, Berlin, Prussia [Germany]—died August 17, 1786, Potsdam, near Berlin), king of Prussia (1740–86), a brilliant military campaigner who, in a series of diplomatic stratagems and wars against Austria and other powers, greatly enlarged Prussia’s territories and made Prussia the foremost military power in Europe. An enlightened absolute monarch, he favored French language and art and built a French Rococo palace, Sanssouci, near Berlin.Frederick, the third king of Prussia, ranks among the two or three dominant figures in the history of modern Germany. Under his leadership Prussia became one of the great states of Europe. Its territories were greatly increased and its military strength displayed to striking effect. From early in his reign Frederick achieved a high reputation as a military commander, and the Prussian army rapidly became a model admired and imitated in many other states. He also emerged quickly as a leading exponent of the ideas of enlightened government, which were then becoming influential throughout much of Europe; indeed, his example did much to spread and strengthen those ideas. Notably, his insistence on the primacy of state over personal or dynastic interests and his religious toleration widely affected the dominant intellectual currents of the age. Even more than his younger contemporaries, Catherine II the Great of Russia and Joseph II in the Habsburg territories, it was Frederick who, during the mid-18th century, established in the minds of educated Europeans a notion of what “enlightened despotism” should be. His actual achievements, however, were sometimes less than they appeared on the surface; indeed, his inevitable reliance on the landowning officer (Junker) class set severe limits in several respects to what he could even attempt. Nevertheless, his reign saw a revolutionary change in the importance and prestige of Prussia, which was to have profound implications for much of the subsequent history of Europe.