Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Obverse nordboutik59 – Reverse Jérémy Pureur
Context
Years: 1910–1915
Islamic (Hijri) Year: 1327
Country: Turkey Country flag
Currency:
(1844—1923)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 93,658,000
Material
Diameter: 16.15 mm
Weight: 1.8 g
Thickness: 1.1 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Nickel
Magnetic: Yes
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard759
Numista: #5194

Obverse

Description:
Toughra "Reshat" within beaded circle. Date/mint letter between toughra and inscription.
Inscription:
حرية ☆ مساواة ☆ عدالة

٣

پاره
Translation:
Freedom ☆ Equality ☆ Justice

3

Pieces
Script: Arabic
Language: Arabic

Reverse

Description:
Denomination within beaded circle.
Inscription:
دولة عثمانية

ضرب في ☆ - ☆ قسطنطينية

٥

پاره

١٣٢٧
Translation:
Struck in Constantinople

5

Para

1327
Script: Arabic
Language: Ottoman Turkish

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Constantinople

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1910٢
19101,664,000
191121,760,000
191221,392,000
191330,579,000
191415,751,000
19152,512,000

Historical background

By 1910, the Ottoman Empire’s currency system was a complex and fragile reflection of its broader financial and geopolitical decline. The empire operated on a bimetallic standard in theory, but in practice its finances were dominated by the Ottoman Lira (also known as the Livre or Mecidiye), which was backed by substantial foreign debt rather than robust domestic reserves. The empire had declared bankruptcy in 1875, leading to the establishment of the Ottoman Public Debt Administration (OPDA) in 1881, a consortium of European creditors that controlled key state revenues. This foreign financial control severely limited the Porte's monetary sovereignty, as the OPDA ensured debt repayments were prioritized, leaving little room for independent economic policy.

The currency landscape was further complicated by the widespread circulation of foreign gold coins, particularly British sovereigns and French francs, which were often preferred over Ottoman coinage for major transactions due to their stable international value. Alongside this, a plethora of paper money (kaime) issued by the state treasury since the Crimean War suffered from frequent depreciation and lack of public trust. Consequently, a dual system existed: gold-based transactions for international trade and state finances, and a unstable silver and paper currency for everyday domestic use, leading to chronic inflation and exchange rate instability.

This monetary fragmentation mirrored the empire's political fragmentation. Attempts at reform, such as the establishment of the Imperial Ottoman Bank (a Franco-British entity that acted as a central bank) in 1863, did not create a unified national currency. By 1910, the system was under increasing strain from the costs of military mobilization, ongoing deficits, and the looming threat of further wars in the Balkans. The currency situation thus stood as a critical weakness, symbolizing the empire's semi-colonial economic status and its precarious path toward the financial collapses that would accompany the Balkan Wars and World War I.

Series: 1910 Ottoman Empire circulation coins

5 Para obverse
5 Para reverse
5 Para
1910-1915
10 Para obverse
10 Para reverse
10 Para
1910-1915
2 Kuruş obverse
2 Kuruş reverse
2 Kuruş
1910
5 Kurush obverse
5 Kurush reverse
5 Kurush
1910
10 Kurush obverse
10 Kurush reverse
10 Kurush
1910
100 Kurush obverse
100 Kurush reverse
100 Kurush
1910
500 Kurush obverse
500 Kurush reverse
500 Kurush
1910
🌱 Very Common