Logo Title
obverse
reverse
CGB
Context
Years: 1792–1793
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Period:
Ruler: Louis XVI
Currency:
(1204—1795)
Demonetization: 31 December 1834
Material
Diameter: 38.5 mm
Weight: 30 g
Silver weight: 27.51 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 91.7% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard615
Numista: #16368
Value
Bullion value: $76.26

Obverse

Description:
Louis XVI
(date)
Inscription:
LOUIS XVI ROI DES FRANÇAIS.

1792.
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
France's genius engraving "Constitution" on tablets with a scepter of reason (tipped with an eye). Flanking the altar: a vigilant rooster and a fasces with Phrygian cap and lyre. Plinth signed: Dupré.
Inscription:
REGNE DE LA LOI.

BB

L'AN 4 DE LA

LIBERTÉ
Script: Latin
Engraver: Augustin Dupré

Edge

Inscriptions in relief, fleurons between the words.
Legend:
LA NATION LA LOI ET LE ROI

Mints

NameMark
StrasbourgBB

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1792BB
1793BB

Historical background

In 1792, France was in the throes of a profound monetary crisis, a direct consequence of the revolutionary government's financial strategies. To address the crippling debt inherited from the Ancien Régime and fund the Revolution itself, the National Assembly had issued the assignat in 1789. Initially a bond backed by the value of confiscated church lands, it was soon transformed into a paper currency. While this injection of money initially stimulated the economy, it set a dangerous precedent for solving fiscal shortfalls by simply printing more notes.

The situation deteriorated rapidly as the government, facing war with Austria and Prussia and internal rebellions, resorted to massive over-issuance of assignats to pay for its escalating expenses. This led to severe inflation, as the volume of paper money far exceeded the value of the nationalized property that supposedly guaranteed it. By 1792, the assignat had lost approximately 40% of its face value against metallic coinage. This created a destructive cycle of hoarding, where gold and silver coins (specie) disappeared from circulation, leaving only the depreciating paper, which merchants were increasingly reluctant to accept at its official rate.

This currency instability exacerbated the social and political turmoil of the period. Soaring prices for bread and basic goods, paid for with devalued paper, caused immense hardship for the urban poor and sans-culottes, fueling their radicalism. It also bred widespread distrust in the government and accusations of speculation against merchants and bankers. The failing assignat thus became both a symbol and a direct cause of the economic distress that underpinned the radicalization of the Revolution, pushing the nation toward the Terror as authorities sought to impose price controls and punish "economic enemies" in a desperate attempt to manage the crisis their monetary policy had helped create.

Series: 1792 France circulation coins

1 Sizain obverse
1 Sizain reverse
1 Sizain
1792-1793
2 Sols obverse
2 Sols reverse
2 Sols
1792-1793
½ Silver Ecu obverse
½ Silver Ecu reverse
½ Silver Ecu
1792-1793
½ Silver Ecu obverse
½ Silver Ecu reverse
½ Silver Ecu
1792
1 Silver Ecu obverse
1 Silver Ecu reverse
1 Silver Ecu
1792-1793
1 Silver Ecu obverse
1 Silver Ecu reverse
1 Silver Ecu
1792-1793
1 Gold Louis obverse
1 Gold Louis reverse
1 Gold Louis
1792-1793
💎 Extremely Rare