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obverse
reverse
Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.
Context
Years: 1715–1718
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Ruler: Louis XV
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 10,657,515
Material
Diameter: 41 mm
Weight: 30.59 g
Silver weight: 28.05 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 91.7% Silver
Standard: Silver ounce
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard414
Numista: #27853
Value
Bullion value: $79.35

Obverse

Description:
Young Louis XV facing right.
Inscription:
LVD•XV•D•G•FR•ET•NAV•REX
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned circular arms.
Inscription:
SIT•NOMEN•DOMINI•BENEDICTVM•1716•
Script: Latin

Edge

Embossed inscription.
Legend:
DOMINE SALVUM FAC REGEM

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1715A107,132
1716&
171692,024,000
1716A2,905,417
1716AA16,000
1716H311,600
1716I8,000
1716K115,200
1716L
1716M89,521
1716N124,062
1716O32,085
1716P
1716Q
1716B96,000
1716BB
1716C188,060
1716D
1716E141,091
1716G5,454
1716S36,000
1716T
1716V
1716W
1716X
1716Y
1716Z21,061
1716ϽϹ5,600
1717B195,709
1717C
1717D
1717E79,237
1717G41,563
1717H200,155
1717V19,777
1717W137,941
1717X60,613
1717Y38,636
1717Z16,342
1717ϽϹ3,285
1717&
171791,103,012
1717A524,844
1717AA9,500
1717I
1717K161,459
1717L
1717M
1717N68,686
1717O20,000
1717P19,924
1717Q
1717S36,343
1717T218,320
1718Q
1718&
17189872,291
1718A256,000
1718C23,200
1718H49,356
1718I1,600
1718K21,200
1718M
1718N18,281
1718O
1718P4,000
1718S15,200
1718T19,200
1718V4,000
1718W35,200
1718X16,800
1718AA4,400
1718B85,601
1718BB
1718D
1718E34,807
1718G13,950
1718Y
1718Z
1718ϽϹ800

Historical background

In 1715, France stood on the precipice of a profound monetary crisis, a direct legacy of the extravagant wars and spending of Louis XIV. The Sun King’s final years had left the treasury effectively bankrupt, with a staggering national debt estimated at between 2.4 and 3 billion livres. The state’s credit was exhausted, and much of its anticipated revenue for years ahead had already been spent in advance through the sale of offices and annuities (rentes). This fiscal abyss created an urgent and desperate need for financial restructuring as the king died and the regency for the five-year-old Louis XV began.

The currency itself was in a state of dangerous instability due to repeated manipulations. To generate short-term cash, the government had engaged in frequent augmentations (raising the official face value of coins) and diminutions (lowering it), as well as recoinages. This practice, known as "crying up" or "crying down" the coinage, created widespread confusion, eroded public trust in money, and disrupted commerce. Merchants and the populace were deeply suspicious of the coin in their hands, never certain of its future official worth, which fostered hoarding and economic paralysis.

Consequently, the primary financial challenge facing the Regent, Philippe d’Orléans, was twofold: to manage the crushing sovereign debt and to restore confidence in the monetary system itself. The immediate response would famously involve the radical schemes of Scottish economist John Law, whose System would soon attempt to solve both problems by replacing metallic currency with paper banknotes and consolidating debt into shares of the Mississippi Company. Thus, the currency situation of 1715 set the stage for one of history’s most dramatic experiments in financial engineering and its subsequent, spectacular collapse.

Series: 1715 France circulation coins

¼ Silver Ecu obverse
¼ Silver Ecu reverse
¼ Silver Ecu
1715
1 Silver Ecu obverse
1 Silver Ecu reverse
1 Silver Ecu
1715
1 Silver Ecu obverse
1 Silver Ecu reverse
1 Silver Ecu
1715-1718
1 Gold Louis obverse
1 Gold Louis reverse
1 Gold Louis
1715
⅒ Silver Ecu obverse
⅒ Silver Ecu reverse
⅒ Silver Ecu
1715-1718
💎 Very Rare