Logo Title
obverse
reverse
SirHarry3 CC0
Context
Year: 1793
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Period:
(1792—1804)
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetization: 1 October 1856
Total mintage: 17,391,099
Material
Diameter: 29 mm
Weight: 12.23 g
Thickness: 3 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard619
Numista: #6115

Obverse

Description:
Sun over equality plaque, flanked by wheat and grapevine, encircled by text.
Inscription:
REPUBLIQUE FRANÇOISE.

LES

HOMMES

SONT

EGAUX

DEVANT

LA LOI

L'AN II.
Script: Latin
Engraver: Augustin Dupré

Reverse

Description:
Phrygian cap over wreath and scales, encircled by lettering and date.
Inscription:
LIBERTE EGALITE

1 S.

A

1793
Script: Latin
Engraver: Augustin Dupré

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1793A20,651
1793
1793AA5,038,449
1793B
1793BB2,519,224
17931,546,666
1793H626,682
1793I311,550
1793L1,730,449
1793MA209,675
1793N662,975
1793R
1793T835,080
1793W1,976,334
1793W*352,120
17931,167,748
1793D393,496
1793

Historical background

In 1793, France was in the throes of the radical phase of its Revolution, facing existential threats from foreign monarchies and internal civil war. To finance these immense conflicts and the revolutionary government itself, the National Convention had exhausted the nation's traditional revenue streams. In response, it aggressively expanded the use of the assignat, a paper currency originally backed by the value of confiscated Church lands. Initially successful, this system was now under catastrophic strain. The government, desperate for funds, resorted to printing vast quantities of assignats to pay for armies, supplies, and services, flooding the economy with paper money not matched by real economic output or the underlying land assets.

This massive over-issuance triggered a vicious cycle of hyperinflation. As the quantity of assignats soared, their value plummeted, leading to soaring prices for basic necessities like bread and fuel. Wages failed to keep pace, causing immense hardship for the urban poor and soldiers' families. A widespread loss of public confidence set in, with many merchants and peasants refusing to accept assignats at their face value or hoarding goods instead. The currency crisis became a social and political crisis, fueling the anger of the sans-culottes and contributing to the pervasive fear and instability that characterized the Terror.

The revolutionary government responded with coercive and ultimately futile measures. The Convention passed the Law of the Maximum in September 1793, imposing price controls on essential goods and fixed wages in an attempt to curb inflation. Harsh penalties, including death, were decreed for those who refused assignats or engaged in speculation. While these draconian laws provided temporary relief, they disrupted markets and encouraged black-market activities. The fundamental problem—the unchecked printing of currency—remained unaddressed, ensuring that the assignat continued its steep decline, eroding the economic foundation of the revolutionary state even as its armies began to achieve military victories.

Series: 1793 France circulation coins

1 Sizain obverse
1 Sizain reverse
1 Sizain
1793
1 Sol obverse
1 Sol reverse
1 Sol
1793
2 Sols obverse
2 Sols reverse
2 Sols
1793
2 Sols obverse
2 Sols reverse
2 Sols
1793
6 Livres obverse
6 Livres reverse
6 Livres
1793
6 Livres obverse
6 Livres reverse
6 Livres
1793
24 Livres obverse
24 Livres reverse
24 Livres
1793
🌱 Common