Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Münzkabinett Berlin CC0
Context
Years: 1785–1792
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Ruler: Louis XVI
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 6,791,915
Material
Diameter: 28 mm
Weight: 15.28 g
Gold weight: 14.01 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 clipboard592
Numista: #16367
Value
Bullion value: $2340.92

Obverse

Description:
Louis XVI's decapitated head. Caption begins at 7 PM.
Inscription:
LUD• XVI• D• G• FR• ET NAV• REX
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned shields of France and Navarre, with workshop letter below.
Inscription:
CHRS • REGN • VINC • IMPER 1786
Script: Latin

Edge

Corded.


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1785A27,014
1785D
1785I
1785T650
1785W3,960
1786A2,641,702
1786AA306,513
1786B251,000
1786BB139,000
1786D1,071,507
1786H43,000
1786I208,012
1786K492,022
1786N217,279
1786T396,032
1786W239,440
1787A
1787AA155,000
1787B87,000
1787D108,678
1787H12,000
1787I10,117
1787K42,000
1787N27,000
1787R
1787T3,073
1787W
1788A
1788AA153,000
1788B19,000
1788D
1788K18,043
1788T7,233
1788W
1789K23,418
1789MA
1789Q
1789T
1789W
1789AA
1789B
1790A
1790AA
1790B
1790BB6,819
1790K7,381
1790M
1790MA
1790Q2,944
1790T667
1790W12,421
1791A34,088
1791AA1,150
1791B1,072
1791BB4,230
1791K903
1791M8,921
1791T667
1791W7,959
1792A
1792BB

Historical background

In 1785, France stood on the precipice of financial collapse, a crisis rooted in decades of structural deficit and exacerbated by its costly involvement in the American Revolutionary War. The state treasury was burdened by an enormous debt, serviced by a complex and archaic fiscal system riddled with exemptions for the nobility and clergy. King Louis XVI's ministers, most notably Charles Alexandre de Calonne, who became Controller-General in 1783, were grappling with the impossibility of raising sufficient revenue through traditional means. The fundamental issue was not a shortage of physical coinage, but a catastrophic shortfall in royal credit and a political inability to reform the tax system.

The currency in circulation itself, the livre tournois, was theoretically backed by silver (écus) and gold (louis d'or) coins, but its value and stability were undermined by repeated manipulations. The government had a long history of secretly debasing the coinage or officially altering the official exchange rates between gold and silver to create short-term liquidity, eroding public trust. By the mid-1780s, these accounting tricks had been largely exhausted, and France was locked into a rigid bimetallic system that struggled with international currency fluctuations. This unstable monetary environment created uncertainty for merchants, creditors, and the growing banking sector.

Calonne's response in 1785 was to authorize the minting of new gold coins with a slightly reduced gold content, a subtle form of devaluation intended to generate seigniorage revenue for the crown without causing immediate public alarm. This technical maneuver, however, was a mere stopgap. It failed to address the core insolvency of the monarchy and instead highlighted the regime's reliance on financial expedients over principled reform. The currency situation of 1785 was thus a symptom of the broader fiscal paralysis that would soon force the calling of the Estates-General in 1789, setting the stage for the French Revolution.
Somewhat Rare