Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Fritz Rudolf Künker GmbH & Co. KG, Osnabrück and Lübke & Wiedemann KG, Leonberg
Context
Years: 1709–1715
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Ruler: Louis XIV
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 146,873
Material
Diameter: 29.5 mm
Weight: 13.5 g
Gold weight: 12.38 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 91.7% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard405
Numista: #270851
Value
Bullion value: $2068.22

Obverse

Description:
Bust right.
Inscription:
LVD XIIII D G FRET NAV REX

K

1713
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Eight L's radiating from a central sun.
Inscription:
CHRS REGN VINC IMP
Script: Latin

Edge

Corded.

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1709B
17109
1710B
1710C
1710D146,873
1710H
1710L
1710M
1710N
1710O
1710P
1710S
1710V
1710X
1710ↄc
1711&
1711C
1711H
1711M
1711N
1711Q
1711Z
1711ↄc
17119
1711B
17129
1712A
1712C
1712H
1712K
1712L
1712M
1712N
1712Q
1712Z
1713C
1713E
1713H
1713K
1713M
17139
1713A
1713N
1713Q
1713T
1713Z
1713ↄc
1714N
1714Q
1714T
1714E
1714K
1714W
1715N
1715E
17159
1715A
1715D
1715K
1715M
1715T

Historical background

In 1709, France faced a severe monetary crisis set against the backdrop of the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714). The conflict had placed immense strain on the royal treasury, forcing King Louis XIV to finance his armies through extraordinary and often desperate measures. The primary method was the repeated debasement of the coinage, where the government would recall gold and silver coins, melt them down, and reissue them with the same face value but a lower precious metal content. This practice, while generating short-term revenue, fundamentally eroded public trust in the currency and triggered rampant inflation.

The situation was catastrophically compounded by the "Grand Hiver" (Great Winter) of 1708-1709, one of the coldest winters in recorded European history. The frost destroyed the wheat harvest, leading to a catastrophic famine. Grain prices skyrocketed, and the combination of hyperinflation and scarcity caused widespread starvation and social unrest. In this context, the debased currency became almost meaningless for daily survival; a person's silver coin might buy only a fraction of the bread it had the previous year, as the value of metal collapsed against the astronomical price of food.

Consequently, the French economy descended into a state of barter and chaos. Peasants hoarded grain, merchants refused to accept the unstable currency, and the government's credit vanished. The monetary system, already weakened by years of manipulation, broke down under the dual pressures of state bankruptcy and ecological disaster. This period stands as a stark example of how fiscal policy, warfare, and environmental shock could converge to devastate an early modern economy, severely undermining the Sun King's authority and foreshadowing the financial turmoil that would culminate in the French Revolution decades later.

Series: 1709 France circulation coins

½ Gold Louis obverse
½ Gold Louis reverse
½ Gold Louis
1709-1715
1 Gold Louis obverse
1 Gold Louis reverse
1 Gold Louis
1709-1715
2 Gold Louis obverse
2 Gold Louis reverse
2 Gold Louis
1709-1715
44 Sols obverse
44 Sols reverse
44 Sols
1709-1714
Legendary