Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Monnaies d'Antan
Context
Years: 1777–1791
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Ruler: Louis XVI
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 75,072,939
Material
Diameter: 29 mm
Weight: 12.24 g
Thickness: 2.2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard578
Numista: #5466

Obverse

Description:
Left: Louis XVI's head, ribbon-tied hair; mint mark below.
Inscription:
LUDOV·XVI· D·GRATIA
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned French shield, split date above.
Inscription:
FRANCIÆ ET NAVARRÆ·REX 1791
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1777H351,820
1777N127,038
1777R400,000
1777W1,500,620
1778&89,260
1778H89,260
1778I59,757
1778M
1778N
1778W1,556,875
1779D2,097,834
1779H654,750
1779I763,530
1779N1,232,180
1779W1,802,965
1779&2,678,280
1779A50,910
1780&3,765,388
1780AA496,230
1780H773,355
1780I1,024,081
1780K
1780M
1780N187,368
1780W1,425,820
1781&636,246
1781A163,660
1781AA
1781H818,695
1781I
1781W3,190,912
1782&567,387
1782AA1,316,836
1782H
1782N
1782R180,573
1782W
1783&
1783A124,120
1783AA165,179
1783BB
1783H84,000
1783I83,940
1783K396,000
1783L1,000,000
1783M1,174,790
1783N854,936
1783R60,884
1783W2,515,235
1784&565,900
1784A96,550
1784AA1,252,000
1784BB945,140
1784D1,712,000
1784H533,000
1784I781,185
1784K1,108,214
1784L1,000,000
1784M799,260
1784N954,778
1784R155,128
1784T2,000,000
1784W2,424,000
1785D
1785&565,900
1785A327,980
1785AA892,000
1785B672,972
1785BB720,000
1785H
1785I757,000
1785K750,000
1785L
1785M
1785N280,140
1785R72,545
1785T591,575
1785W2,115,167
1786K
1786M
1786R
1786T
1786&250,000
1786A
1786AA
1786D250,000
1786H
1786I
1786W1,811,350
1787D
1787H
1787I
1787K1,108,257
1787MA
1787R180,573
1787T
1787W
1788A349,070
1788AA291,059
1788B
1788D660,026
1788H41,500
1788K
1788MA1,374,741
1788R9,480
1788T460,103
1788W
1789A
1789B
1789H
1789K
1789M666,666
1789MA
1789N666,666
1789R
1789T500,000
1789W
1790AA
1790B3,000,000
1790D3,000,000
1790K120,057
1790M
1790MA
1790N
1790R
1790W
1791A
1791AA
1791B
1791BB
1791D
1791H
1791I
1791K
1791L
1791M
1791MA2,120,892
1791N
1791Q1,100,729
1791R
1791T578,622
1791W

Historical background

In 1777, France was navigating a precarious financial situation under the reign of Louis XVI. The national treasury was severely depleted, a legacy of decades of extravagant spending by the court, costly wars (most notably the Seven Years' War which ended in 1763), and an inefficient, archaic tax system that heavily burdened the peasantry while exempting the nobility and clergy. To manage its debts, the monarchy relied heavily on borrowing, particularly through the sale of government bonds (rentes), and was increasingly dependent on a small group of powerful financiers. This structural deficit was the true core of the "currency situation," as the state's solvency, not the coinage itself, was the fundamental problem.

The physical currency in circulation was a complex mix of metallic coins. The official unit of account was the livre tournois, but actual coins included gold louis d'or, silver écus, and a plethora of smaller copper and billon coins. The system was notoriously confusing, with values fluctuating between regions. More critically, to fund its participation in the American Revolutionary War (which France had formally entered in 1778), the government was forced to engage in further borrowing and would soon resort to the dangerous expedient of simply printing more paper money. While the billets de monnaie and later the assignats were still a few years away, the path was being set for monetary inflation.

Thus, the currency situation in 1777 was one of underlying crisis masked by fragile stability. The absolute monarchy was trapped in a vicious cycle: it needed major fiscal reform to restore confidence and balance its books, but any attempt to tax the privileged estates met with fierce political resistance from the Parlements and the nobility. Finance Minister Jacques Necker, appointed that same year, famously avoided new taxes and continued borrowing to fund the war, publishing his optimistic Compte rendu au roi in 1781 to bolster public credit. This approach, however, only deferred the inevitable collapse, making the eventual monetary and financial explosion of the French Revolution more severe.

Series: 1777 France circulation coins

1 Sol obverse
1 Sol reverse
1 Sol
1777-1791
1 Liard obverse
1 Liard reverse
1 Liard
1777-1792
1 Sizain obverse
1 Sizain reverse
1 Sizain
1777-1791
🌱 Very Common