Logo Title
obverse
reverse
PCGS
Context
Years: 1704–1709
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Ruler: Louis XIV
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 25 mm
Weight: 6.75 g
Gold weight: 6.19 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 clipboard365
Numista: #376835
Value
Bullion value: $1034.11

Obverse

Description:
Laureate facing right.
Inscription:
LVD. XIIII. D. G. FR. ET. NAV. REX

1705
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crossed scepters, crowned fleur-de-lis at angles, central circle.
Inscription:
CHRS REGN VINC IMP

H
Script: Latin

Edge

Corded edge.

Categories

Symbol> Fleur-de-lis


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1704&
17049
1704A
1704AA
1704B
1704BB
1704C
1704D
1704E
1704G
1704H
1704I
1704K
1704L
1704M
1704N
1704O
1704P
1704R
1704S
1704X
1704Y
1704Z
1704ↄc
1704T
1704V
1704W
1705B
1705&
17059
1705A
1705G
1705H
1705I
1705K
1705L
1705M
1705W
1705X
1705Y
1705BB
1705C
1705D
1705E
1705N
1705O
1705P
1705R
1705S
1705T
1705V
1706N
1706W
1706A
1706B
1706BB
1706D
1706L
1707&
17079
1707A
1707M
17089
1708A
1708P
1709Z
17099
1709A
1709E
1709T

Historical background

In 1704, France was in the midst of the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714), a conflict that placed immense financial strain on the kingdom of Louis XIV. The Sun King's ambitions, coupled with the costs of maintaining a massive army and funding allies, had drained the royal treasury. To meet these extraordinary expenses, the government, under Finance Minister Michel Chamillart, resorted to a series of desperate monetary manipulations. The primary method was the repeated augmentation and diminution of the coinage—arbitrarily decreeing changes to the face value of existing gold and silver coins to extract seigniorage revenue from the public.

This period was characterized by a severe shortage of specie, as high-value coins were hoarded or melted down in response to the state's unpredictable edicts. The government's frequent re-minting of coins at new official values created widespread confusion, crippled commercial confidence, and fueled inflation. Prices for essential goods rose sharply, as merchants struggled to keep pace with the unstable legal tender. The situation was exacerbated by the issuance of billets de monnaie (treasury notes), an early form of paper credit that began to circulate but was soon discounted due to doubts about the crown's ability to redeem them.

Consequently, France's currency system in 1704 was in a state of profound crisis and instability. The manipulations provided short-term cash for the war effort but at the devastating cost of undermining the entire monetary economy. Trust in the royal coinage was eroded, long-distance trade was disrupted, and the burden of the war was effectively transferred to the general populace through inflation and financial chaos, sowing seeds of discontent that would resonate through the remainder of Louis XIV's reign.
Legendary