Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Yannick Roszak
Context
Years: 1589–1610
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Ruler: Henry IV
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 25 mm
Weight: 4.75 g
Silver weight: 4.36 g
Composition: 91.7% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Hammered
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard2
Numista: #346050
Value
Bullion value: $12.63

Obverse

Description:
Fleur-de-lis cross.
Inscription:
Plusieurs variantes:

HENRICVS. 4. D. G. FRANC. ET. NAV. REX. DB

HENRICVS. 4. D. G. FRANC. ET. NAVA. REX. DB
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Arms of France, Navarre, and Béarn.
Inscription:
Plusieurs variantes:

★ GRATIA. DEI. SVM. Q. D. SVM. 1591 D ★

★ GRATIA. DEI. SVM. ID. Q. SVM. 1607 ★
Script: Latin

Edge


Mints

NameMark
Morlaàs
Pau

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1589
1590
1591
1592
1593
1594
1595
1596
1597
1598
1599
1600
1601
1602
1603
1604
1605
1606
1607
1608
1609
1610

Historical background

In 1589, France was embroiled in the final, brutal phase of the Wars of Religion, a period of profound monetary instability. The long conflict had devastated agriculture and trade, crippling the tax base just as royal expenditures for mercenary armies soared. Successive Valois kings, particularly Henry III, resorted to desperate financial measures, including the sale of offices, new taxes, and—most damagingly—the repeated debasement of the coinage. By reducing the precious metal content in coins while maintaining their face value, the crown created short-term revenue but triggered severe inflation, a loss of public confidence in currency, and economic chaos.

The monetary system itself was complex and vulnerable. France operated on a bimetallic system of gold écus and silver livres tournois, but the official exchange rates between them were fixed by royal decree, often diverging from market values. This, combined with the circulation of both legitimate and counterfeit coins of varying quality from foreign and domestic mints, created a bewildering and untrustworthy monetary landscape. Money changers and merchants thrived on the confusion, while ordinary people and creditors suffered as the real value of their coins and incomes plummeted.

The ascension of Henry IV to the throne in 1589, following the assassination of Henry III, did not bring immediate relief. The new Bourbon king, a Protestant convert to Catholicism, initially controlled only a fraction of the kingdom and faced continued military opposition from the Catholic League, backed by Spain. His precarious position forced him to continue the ruinous financial practices of his predecessors simply to fund his campaigns. Thus, the currency situation in 1589 represented both a cause and a symptom of the kingdom's near-total collapse, with genuine monetary reform impossible until after the military and political consolidation of the realm, which Henry would only achieve in the following decade.

Series: 1589 France circulation coins

¼ Silver Ecu obverse
¼ Silver Ecu reverse
¼ Silver Ecu
1589-1610
½ Franc obverse
½ Franc reverse
½ Franc
1589-1610
⅛ Silver Ecu obverse
⅛ Silver Ecu reverse
⅛ Silver Ecu
1589-1610
1 Gold Ecu obverse
1 Gold Ecu reverse
1 Gold Ecu
1589-1595
2 Gold Ecus obverse
2 Gold Ecus reverse
2 Gold Ecus
1589-1590
Legendary