Logo Title
Context
Years: 1693–1699
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Ruler: Louis XIV
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 1,428
Material
Weight: 2.26 g
Silver weight: 2.07 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 91.7% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard291
Numista: #360492
Value
Bullion value: $6.01

Obverse

Description:
Louis XIV in right-facing bust.
Inscription:
LVD• XIIII• D: G FR• ET• NA• RE• DB
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned shield of France, Navarre, and Béarn over palm branches.
Inscription:
SIT• NOMEN • DOMINI • • BENEDICTVM • 1693
Script: Latin

Edge

Corded.

Mints

NameMark
Pau

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1693
1694
1697
1698912
1699516

Historical background

In 1693, France was in the grip of a severe monetary and economic crisis, a direct consequence of King Louis XIV's relentless foreign wars, most notably the ongoing Nine Years' War (1688-1697). The state's finances were exhausted by the colossal cost of maintaining Europe's largest army and funding widespread military campaigns. To meet these obligations, the government, under Finance Minister Pontchartrain, resorted to desperate measures, including the sale of offices, borrowing at exorbitant rates, and most critically, the systematic debasement of the coinage.

This deliberate debasement took the form of repeated augmentations and diminutions: the official face value of existing gold and silver coins was arbitrarily raised by royal edict to draw more coin into the treasury, only to be later lowered to profit the crown when it re-minted them. Simultaneously, the mint began striking new coins with the same face value but containing significantly less precious metal. This practice shattered public confidence, as people hoarded old, full-weight coins (Gresham's Law in action) and the value of the currency became wildly unstable. The scarcity of sound money crippled commerce, while prices, particularly for grain, soared.

The situation was catastrophically compounded in 1693 by a harvest failure, leading to a devastating famine that killed an estimated two million people. The monetary chaos amplified the economic distress, as wages paid in debased coin bought less and less food. Thus, the currency crisis of 1693 was not an isolated financial event but a key component of a "general crisis" encompassing war finance, agricultural collapse, and immense human suffering, exposing the severe limitations of the Sun King's absolutist state when pushed beyond its fiscal means.

Series: 1693 France circulation coins

1⁄12 Silver Ecu obverse
1⁄12 Silver Ecu reverse
1⁄12 Silver Ecu
1693-1699
1 Gold Louis obverse
1 Gold Louis reverse
1 Gold Louis
1693-1700
1⁄16 Silver Ecu obverse
1⁄16 Silver Ecu reverse
1⁄16 Silver Ecu
1693-1699
Legendary