Renesian Krone

The Renesian krone (also known as Krone) was the of Renesia and the predecessor of the Renesian mark which used the, currently, it is obsolete. The Kronen was used until 1763 when it went out of circulation. The Royal Mint minted and printed the Kronen per the Prince's orders. It was the first unified currency in Renesia after Varic Empire's Imperial zelta (also known as zelta).

History
Before 1601 many powerful nobles and even some cities minted their own currency ending up with 11 currencies being used at once, which created confusion while exchanging or paying taxes. To remedy this issue the Prince banned the minting of any new currency and gave all minting power to the Royal Mint. The first coin produced had a crown featured on the observed side which gave it its name, the Krone. By 1603 all taxes were paid in Kronen, and all other currencies were smelted and minted into Kronen.

In 1630 paper notes were introduced as Sarrisen sarc paper notes spread rapidly showing how easy it is to use and carry.

The Krone, along with the Sarc, was being replaced by the Renesian Mark in 1752. However, the Krone stayed in circulation until 1763 as the Mark was backed by Gold instead of Silver and all foreign traders prefer to trade in Marks instead.