Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.
Context
Years: 1870–1871
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Period:
(1870—1940)
Currency:
(1795—1959)
Demonetization: 25 June 1928
Total mintage: 604,313
Material
Diameter: 37 mm
Weight: 25 g
Silver weight: 22.50 g
Thickness: 2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard818
Numista: #1185
Value
Bullion value: $63.65

Obverse

Description:
Left: The Republic as Ceres, crowned with wheat, flowers, olives, and oak. A ribbon on her forehead reads CONCOR. Below: E. A. OUDINE. F.
Inscription:
REPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE.

E.A. OUDINE. F.
Translation:
FRENCH REPUBLIC.

E.A. OUDINE. F.
Script: Latin
Language: French

Reverse

Description:
Face value framed by a vegetable wreath.
Inscription:
5

FRANCS

1870
Script: Latin

Edge

Inscription in relief "DIEU PROTEGE LA FRANCE"
Legend:
DIEU ★ PROTEGE ★ LA FRANCE ★★★★★
Translation:
GOD PROTECTS FRANCE
Language: French

Mints

NameMark
Monnaie de ParisA
BordeauxK

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1870A
1870K
1871K604,313

Historical background

In 1870, France operated under a bimetallic system, established by the Franc Germinal law of 1803. This system fixed the value of the franc to specific quantities of both gold and silver, creating a legal exchange ratio between the two metals. The franc was defined as 0.290322 grams of fine gold or 4.5 grams of fine silver, establishing a mint ratio of 15.5 to 1. This system aimed to provide monetary stability and facilitate international trade, and for decades it functioned effectively, making the franc a leading international currency.

However, the bimetallic system was under growing strain by the late 1860s. Major discoveries of silver in the Americas, combined with many European nations like Britain and the emerging German states moving towards a pure gold standard, led to a global oversupply and depreciation of silver. This caused the market value of silver to fall below its fixed legal ratio to gold in France, leading to Gresham's Law in practice: "bad money drives out good." Cheaper silver coins flooded circulation, while gold coins were hoarded or exported, threatening France's gold reserves.

The outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in July 1870 triggered a full-blown crisis. To finance the war, the government suspended the convertibility of banknotes into specie (gold or silver) and granted the Bank of France the right to issue more paper currency. This move effectively ended the bimetallic standard in practice, placing France on a temporary, inflationary paper money regime. The subsequent defeat and the enormous war indemnity of five billion francs imposed by the new German Empire in 1871 would force a fundamental restructuring, ultimately leading France to formally abandon bimetallism and join the international gold standard in the latter part of the decade.

Series: 1870 France circulation coins

10 Centimes obverse
10 Centimes reverse
10 Centimes
1870-1898
2 Francs obverse
2 Francs reverse
2 Francs
1870-1871
2 Francs obverse
2 Francs reverse
2 Francs
1870-1895
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1870-1871
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1870
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1870-1889
🌱 Common