Logo Title
emonnaies.fr

1000 Euro (bataille d’Austerlitz) – France

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: (fr) 220e anniversaire de la bataille d’Austerlitz.
France
Context
Year: 2025
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1958)
Currency:
(since 2002)
Total mintage: 2,025
Material
Diameter: 29 mm
Weight: 8 g
Gold weight: 7.99 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.9% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Numista: #535072
Value
Exchange value: 1000 EUR = $1178.40
Bullion value: $1328.42

Obverse

Description:
(fr) "1000 EURO" entre des branches de laurier et de chêne, avec l'inscription "RÉPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE" et trois hexagones.
Inscription:
RÉPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE

EURO 1000
Script: Latin
Engraver: Joaquin Jimenez

Reverse

Description:
Le revers s'inspire d'une médaille de 1806 célébrant la victoire d'Austerlitz. Il figure un sceptre ailé surmonté de Charlemagne, entouré de foudres, reprenant ainsi l'imagerie symbolique de l'Empire napoléonien.
Inscription:
2025

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Monnaie de Paris

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
20252,025BU

Historical background

In 2025, France finds itself navigating a complex and somewhat bifurcated currency landscape, firmly within the Eurozone but grappling with the persistent political and social debate over monetary sovereignty. The euro remains the sole legal tender, managed by the European Central Bank (ECB), with France advocating within the Governing Council for policies balancing inflation control with targeted support for green investments and economic stimulus. However, the digital euro project, in its advanced pilot stages, has become a focal point of both technical preparation and public discourse, raising questions about privacy, financial inclusion, and the role of traditional banks.

Domestically, the currency "situation" is less about a dual currency and more about the rise of alternative payment systems and the state's push for financial digitalization. The government continues to promote a France Numérique agenda, encouraging cashless transactions while also legislating to protect cash access as a public service. Parallel to this, a vibrant ecosystem of local complementary currencies (like the Eusko in the Basque Country or La Gonette in Lyon) persists, often tied to regional identity and sustainable development goals, though they operate at a marginal economic scale compared to the euro.

The underlying tension stems from broader European and geopolitical pressures. As the EU deepens Economic and Monetary Union, discussions on a potential "digital franc" as a sovereign complement have been quietly explored in policy circles, though officially secondary to the ECB-led digital euro. Furthermore, global currency volatility and the weaponization of financial systems have reinforced the French establishment's commitment to the euro as a pillar of strategic autonomy, even as fringe political movements on both the left and right continue to voice nostalgia for a return to the franc, framing it as a tool for regaining control over fiscal and social policy.

Series: Major landmarks in the history of Humanity

1000 Euro obverse
1000 Euro reverse
1000 Euro
2025
50 Euro obverse
50 Euro reverse
50 Euro
2025
50 Euro obverse
50 Euro reverse
50 Euro
2025
200 Euro obverse
200 Euro reverse
200 Euro
2025
25 Euro obverse
25 Euro reverse
25 Euro
2025
10 Euro obverse
10 Euro reverse
10 Euro
2025
20 Euro obverse
20 Euro reverse
20 Euro
2025
Legendary