Brunswick-Luneburg or Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel

Something that's always bugged me.
The 1915 3 and 5 Mark pieces from Brunswick...
Krause lists them under Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel
Money-Trend and Muenzen-Revue list them under Braunschweig-Lueneburg (Brunswick-Luneburg)
Jaeger lists them under Braunschweig (Brunswick)
The common varieties of these coins say "Braunschweig u. Lueneb"; the rarer varieties just "Braunschweig"
Which is correct (or the most correct)?
The 1915 3 and 5 Mark pieces from Brunswick...
Krause lists them under Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel
Money-Trend and Muenzen-Revue list them under Braunschweig-Lueneburg (Brunswick-Luneburg)
Jaeger lists them under Braunschweig (Brunswick)
The common varieties of these coins say "Braunschweig u. Lueneb"; the rarer varieties just "Braunschweig"
Which is correct (or the most correct)?
Ron Guth
President
PCGS CoinFacts - the Internet Encyclopedia of U.S. Coins
www.CoinFacts.com
President
PCGS CoinFacts - the Internet Encyclopedia of U.S. Coins
www.CoinFacts.com
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Don
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I agree with you that Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel did not exist in 1915. My reading of the Internet(?) is that in 1915 it was just a Duchy called Brunswick. If that's the case, why did they add Luneburg to some of the coins and why does Krause list it under Wolfenbuttel at all?
Help!
President
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Speaking of which, I'm headed there now. Gotta get to the PO downtown.
I have always called them Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel and I like the "Wolfenbuttel" part because that's where Jägermeister is made
3Mark
Edit - guess I'm a slow typist!
My wantlist & references
By the end of the Wars and the Congress of Vienna, the Electorate of Brunswick-Luneberg had evolved into the Kingdom of Hanover. Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel was still a Duchy, and since no other country was known as "Brunswick", the "Wolfenbuttel" could be dropped in conventional use. Brunswick and Hanover were completely separate though neighbouring countries (see map), ruled over by separate branches of the family.
Hanover (formerly Brunswick-Luneberg) had the poor judgement to side with the Austrians against the Prussians in the War of 1866. They lost, and Hanover was wiped off the map; the royal titles were abolished and the territory of Hanover was assimilated directly into Prussia.
Brunswick (formerly Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel) wisely sided with the Prussians, and remained an independent country after 1866, voluntarily joining the German Empire in 1871 as a member-state. After the assimilation of Hannover, it was almost completely surrounded by Prussia, as you can see from this later map.
The last Duke of the House of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, William VIII, died in 1884 without direct male descendants. The now-landless former King George V of Hanover immediately put in a claim to the throne as the closest male heir, but the House of Hanover was still in Prussia's bad books, and Prussia rejected such claims. From 1884 to 1913, Prussia (which had by then become the dominant power in the new German Empire) appointed Regents for the Duchy of Brunswick in an effort to forestall a return of a Hanoverian monarch. It wasn't until 1913 that Ernst August III, grandson of George V of Hanover and son-in-law of the Prussian King and Emperor William II, became the last ruler of Brunswick.
His lands and titles, however, were for the old Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, not the old Brunswick-Luneberg. I would assume the use of "Luneberg" on the 1913 Royal Wedding & Accession coins of this ruler was either in error, or only in an honorific sense, acknowledging that he was a descendant of the House of Hanover.
So to answer your question, the coins "should" be filed under either Brunswick or Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, since that was the name of the state that issued them.
Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius, "Meditations"
Apparently I have been awarded the DPOTD twice.
<< <i>Prior to the Napoleonic Wars, there were basically only two remaining branches of the House of Brunswick: the Electorate of Brunswick-Luneberg (which changed names, depending on which city the ruler happened to prefer living in) and the Duchy of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel.
By the end of the Wars and the Congress of Vienna, the Electorate of Brunswick-Luneberg had evolved into the Kingdom of Hanover. Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel was still a Duchy, and since no other country was known as "Brunswick", the "Wolfenbuttel" could be dropped in conventional use. Brunswick and Hanover were completely separate though neighbouring countries (see map), ruled over by separate branches of the family.
Hanover (formerly Brunswick-Luneberg) had the poor judgement to side with the Austrians against the Prussians in the War of 1866. They lost, and Hanover was wiped off the map; the royal titles were abolished and the territory of Hanover was assimilated directly into Prussia.
Brunswick (formerly Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel) wisely sided with the Prussians, and remained an independent country after 1866, voluntarily joining the German Empire in 1871 as a member-state. After the assimilation of Hannover, it was almost completely surrounded by Prussia, as you can see from this later map.
The last Duke of the House of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, William VIII, died in 1884 without direct male descendants. The now-landless former King George V of Hanover immediately put in a claim to the throne as the closest male heir, but the House of Hanover was still in Prussia's bad books, and Prussia rejected such claims. From 1884 to 1913, Prussia (which had by then become the dominant power in the new German Empire) appointed Regents for the Duchy of Brunswick in an effort to forestall a return of a Hanoverian monarch. It wasn't until 1913 that Ernst August III, grandson of George V of Hanover and son-in-law of the Prussian King and Emperor William II, became the last ruler of Brunswick.
His lands and titles, however, were for the old Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, not the old Brunswick-Luneberg. I would assume the use of "Luneberg" on the 1913 Royal Wedding & Accession coins of this ruler was either in error, or only in an honorific sense, acknowledging that he was a descendant of the House of Hanover.
So to answer your question, the coins "should" be filed under either Brunswick or Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, since that was the name of the state that issued them. >>
Sapyx,
Thanks for this excellent synopsis. You've distilled several centuries into a very understandable format.
President
PCGS CoinFacts - the Internet Encyclopedia of U.S. Coins
www.CoinFacts.com
DPOTD-3
'Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery'
CU #3245 B.N.A. #428
Don