Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1831–1848
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Currency:
(1795—1959)
Demonetization: 17 June 1868
Total mintage: 12,399,673
Material
Diameter: 27 mm
Weight: 10 g
Silver weight: 9.00 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard743
Numista: #1228
Value
Bullion value: $25.33

Obverse

Description:
Portrait of Louis Philippe I facing right encircled by text.
Inscription:
LOUIS PHILIPPE I ROI DES FRANÇAIS
Translation:
LOUIS PHILIPPE I KING OF THE FRENCH
Script: Latin
Language: French

Reverse

Description:
Laurel-encircled denomination and year.
Inscription:
2

FRANCS

1847

A
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1831A9,996
1831B49,185
1831I
1831W32,575
1832A687,374
1832B383,643
1832BB55,242
1832D238,669
1832H186,042
1832I72,017
1832K75,918
1832L23,989
1832M69,137
1832MA63,860
1832Q22,379
1832T103,684
1832W426,340
1833MA20,710
1833Q36,730
1833T28,321
1833W167,435
1833A193,619
1833B104,490
1833BB73,950
1833D97,518
1833H22,252
1833I
1833K23,464
1833L13,603
1833M49,694
1834M77,696
1834A492,360
1834B342,618
1834BB115,205
1834D97,821
1834H71,759
1834I34,165
1834K56,547
1834L17,238
1834MA19,114
1834Q69,351
1834T104,182
1834W729,438
1835MA15,290
1835A451,898
1835B19,159
1835BB
1835D39,659
1835H9,679
1835I47,651
1835K41,773
1835L
1835M41,109
1835T17,452
1835W
1836BB72,581
1836A112,070
1836B113,457
1836D5,513
1836K19,732
1836M6,741
1836W56,900
1837A104,179
1837B255,661
1837BB21,846
1837D9,766
1837K35,778
1837MA25,057
1837W229,900
1838D
1838A93,180
1838B155,561
1838BB82,063
1838K19,487
1838MA
1838W169,725
1839A35,989
1839B101,997
1839BB47,208
1839D7,287
1839K31,448
1839W104,695
1840A42,276
1840B120,387
1840BB67,810
1840D10,128
1840K39,073
1840W52,940
1841A67,967
1841B22,079
1841BB57,865
1841K37,436
1841W290,020
1842A17,337
1842B147,196
1842BB26,420
1842K34,629
1842W199,352
1843A67,524
1843B67,250
1843BB58,919
1843K27,806
1843W286,478
1844A30,175
1844B12,521
1844BB85,660
1844K31,090
1844W289,370
1845B201,049
1845BB75,596
1845K17,736
1845W353,015
1845A
1846A304,608
1846BB43,475
1846K17,800
1846W48,974
1847A798,285
1847BB63,749
1847K6,498
1848A83,438
1848BB23,211
1848D11,710

Historical background

In 1831, France was navigating a complex and transitional monetary landscape under the July Monarchy of King Louis-Philippe. The nation operated on a bimetallic system, established by the Franc Germinal law of 1803, which defined the franc in terms of fixed weights of both gold and silver (1 franc = 4.5 grams of fine silver, or 0.290 grams of gold). This system aimed to provide stability, but it was increasingly strained by market fluctuations in the relative value of the two metals, often causing one to disappear from circulation as it was hoarded or exported based on which metal was overvalued at the mint.

The period following the 1830 Revolution was one of economic uncertainty, and the currency reflected this. While the official coinage was sound, the circulation was cluttered with a variety of older, worn coins from the ancien régime and the Revolutionary era, as well as foreign coins, leading to practical complications in everyday commerce. Furthermore, the state faced a significant shortage of small-denomination coins for daily wages and transactions, a problem that hampered the working classes and local trade. This scarcity was partly addressed by the continued tolerance of private token issues from chambers of commerce and manufacturers.

Politically, the currency was a symbol of the regime's desired stability and bourgeois values, contrasting with the paper money assignats of the Revolution that had led to disastrous inflation. Consequently, there was a deep-seated public and governmental aversion to paper currency. Banknotes issued by the Bank of France existed but were primarily used by merchants and in large-scale transactions, not by the general populace who distrusted them. Thus, France in 1831 was caught between a theoretically robust bimetallic standard and the practical monetary challenges of a society still deeply reliant on, yet lacking sufficient, tangible metallic coinage.

Series: 1831 France circulation coins

¼ Franc obverse
¼ Franc reverse
¼ Franc
1831-1845
½ Franc obverse
½ Franc reverse
½ Franc
1831-1845
1 Franc obverse
1 Franc reverse
1 Franc
1831
2 Francs obverse
2 Francs reverse
2 Francs
1831-1848
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1831
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1831
40 Francs obverse
40 Francs reverse
40 Francs
1831-1839
🌟 Uncommon