Yeesh, that first page is a $100k alone, maybe more. There's a reason the 7070 starts when it does - it is affordable for most collectors.
I'll start working on the early 1800s when I get a chance. Point is, even without the late pricey 1700s coins, my idea is to have them grouped by types, not just by denomination.
I organized my Austro-Hungarian type set in the way the OP is suggesting. I made a spreadsheet with a row for each type, and then the columns represented the years. I would then mark off the years each type was minted. Once you do this, visually, it is a lot easier to create logical groupings of the coins. Sure there are some overlaps of the types, but they really don't end up looking that significant when viewed on a timeline like this. I suspect that type albums use denomination first to lower manufacturing costs. It keeps all the like size holes together, which let you fit more coins on a page for smaller diameter denominations. After all, the size of the row is dictated by the largest diameter coin on the row.