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obverse
reverse
Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.
Context
Years: 1791–1793
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Period:
Ruler: Louis XVI
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 3,956,589
Material
Diameter: 29.5 mm
Weight: 10.15 g
Silver weight: 6.76 g
Thickness: 2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 66.6% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard606
Numista: #8280
Value
Bullion value: $19.03

Obverse

Description:
Louis XVI's bare head, hair tied with a neck ribbon. "Vintage" below. Legend begins at 7 o'clock.
Inscription:
LOUIS XVI ROI DES FRANÇOIS

·1792·
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Genius engraving the Constitution on an altar; "30 SOLS" on both sides.
Inscription:
REGNE DE LA LOI

30 SOLS

A

DUPRE

L'AN 4 DE LA

LIBERTÉ
Script: Latin
Engraver: Augustin Dupré

Edge

Alternating rhombuses and royal lilies.

Categories

Person> Monarch


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1791A1,113,451
1791BB17,783
1791D
1791H
1791K18,596
1791N1,253
1791T28,940
1791W117,313
1791🐄
1791I1,693,846
1792A
1792AA
1792B
1792BB
1792D
1792H
1792I
1792K
1792L
1792MA
1792N
1792Q
1792R
1792T
1792W167,479
1792🐄
1793D200,000
1793I
1793K20,000
1793M20,000
1793MA50,000
1793N5,000
1793Q
1793W362,328
1793🐄140,600

Historical background

In 1791, France was in the throes of a profound financial and monetary crisis, the roots of which stretched back to the bankrupt monarchy of the Ancien Régime. The revolutionary government, the National Constituent Assembly, inherited a colossal debt and a severe shortage of specie (gold and silver coin). To address this, they had famously nationalized church lands in 1789, using them as backing for a new paper currency: the assignat. Initially conceived as interest-bearing bonds, these were transformed into mandatory legal tender in 1790, flooding the economy with paper money to pay creditors and fund the Revolution.

The situation by 1791 was one of dangerous transition and growing instability. While the assignats initially restored some liquidity and facilitated the sale of biens nationaux (nationalized lands), their over-issuance had already begun to trigger inflation and a loss of public confidence. A critical divide emerged between those who saw the paper currency as a necessary revolutionary tool and those, like the more conservative financiers, who demanded a return to sound metallic currency. The Assembly's policies were contradictory, attempting to enforce the assignat's acceptance while also passing decrees that inadvertently highlighted its weakness, such as requiring taxes to be paid in assignats, which then accelerated their circulation and depreciation.

Thus, the currency landscape of 1791 was a precarious experiment on the brink of failure. The assignat was becoming unmoored from its land-backed promise, as the sheer volume in circulation far exceeded the value of the properties for sale. This early stage of depreciation sowed economic uncertainty, fueled social unrest over rising prices, and set the stage for the catastrophic hyperinflation that would engulf France in the coming years. The monetary policy was not just an economic issue but a deeply political one, reflecting the revolutionary struggle to create a new order while battling the financial ghosts of the old.

Series: 1791 France circulation coins

1 Sol obverse
1 Sol reverse
1 Sol
1791-1793
1 Sol obverse
1 Sol reverse
1 Sol
1791-1793
2 Sols obverse
2 Sols reverse
2 Sols
1791-1793
15 Sols obverse
15 Sols reverse
15 Sols
1791-1793
15 Sols obverse
15 Sols reverse
15 Sols
1791-1792
30 Sols obverse
30 Sols reverse
30 Sols
1791-1793
30 Sols obverse
30 Sols reverse
30 Sols
1791-1793
🌱 Fairly Common