Logo Title
obverse
reverse
iBertrand.be
Context
Years: 1792–1794
Country: Belgium Country flag
Ruler: Francis II
Currency:
(1744—1798)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 27 mm
Weight: 7.5 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard57
Numista: #26498

Obverse

Description:
Portrait right. Legend: FRAN II ROMANORUM IMPERATOR UX BURGUNDIAE.
Inscription:
FRANC·II·D·G·R·IMP·D·B·
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Inscription in five lines, date and mint mark within wreath.
Inscription:
AD USUM BELGII AUSTR·

1794·

(marque d'atelier)
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1792
1793
1794

Historical background

In 1792, the currency situation in the Austrian Netherlands (approximately modern-day Belgium and Luxembourg) was complex and strained, reflecting the region's political and economic turbulence. The monetary system was a fragmented bimetallic one, operating on the Carolus guilder (or florin), divided into 20 stuivers. However, the circulation was a chaotic mix of domestic coinage, foreign coins (particularly Dutch guilders and French écus), and a proliferation of paper money issued by various public and private institutions. This lack of uniformity created significant challenges for trade and daily transactions, as the value and acceptance of different forms of money were inconsistent.

The instability was exacerbated by the Brabant Revolution (1789-1790), a brief period of independence from Habsburg rule, which had disrupted fiscal policy and damaged confidence. Although Austrian authority was reasserted by the end of 1790, the government in Vienna, preoccupied with war with the Ottoman Empire and growing tensions with revolutionary France, paid little attention to the province's economic woes. Consequently, the money supply was inadequate for the region's commercial needs, leading to liquidity shortages and facilitating the circulation of debased and counterfeit coins.

Most critically, the year 1792 was one of impending invasion, as revolutionary French armies were massing on the border. This imminent military threat triggered capital flight, hoarding of specie (gold and silver coins), and a severe collapse in the value of paper notes, as public trust evaporated. By the time the Battle of Jemappes in November 1792 resulted in a French conquest, the monetary system was already in a state of de facto crisis, setting the stage for the radical currency reforms and upheavals that would follow under French occupation.
🌟 Uncommon