Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Ringgy CC BY
Context
Year: 1951
Islamic (Hijri) Year: 1370
Issuer: Morocco Issuer flag
Ruler: Mohammed V
Currency:
(1910—1959)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 20,000,000
Material
Diameter: 22 mm
Weight: 1.2 g
Thickness: 1.5 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Aluminium
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard47
Numista: #1711

Obverse

Description:
Starlore.
Inscription:
الدولة المغربية

EMPIRE .MAROC. CHERIFIEN
Translation:
The Moroccan State
Cherifian Empire .Morocco.
Scripts: Arabic, Latin
Languages: Arabic, French
Engraver: J. Hainaut

Reverse

Description:
Date-bracketed value.
Inscription:
السكة المحمدية

فرنكان

2

FRANCS

An 1951 1370 عام

الشريفة

J.HAINAUT
Translation:
The Muhammadan Coin

Francs

2

FRANCS

Year 1951 1370

The Noble

J. Hainaut
Scripts: Arabic, Latin
Languages: Arabic, French, Latin
Engraver: J. Hainaut

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Monnaie de Paris

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1951Proof
1951Prooflike
195120,000,000

Historical background

In 1951, Morocco's currency situation was a complex reflection of its political status as a French and Spanish protectorate, with the international zone of Tangier adding a third monetary layer. The French franc, issued by Bank Al-Maghrib (a state bank under French control), was the dominant currency in the French zone, circulating alongside a limited issue of Moroccan francs pegged at parity. The Spanish peseta circulated in the northern Spanish protectorate, while the Tangier franc (effectively a hard currency pegged to the French franc but with full convertibility) was used in the International Zone. This fragmentation hindered domestic economic integration and trade.

Economically, the post-World War II period brought inflationary pressures and a growing balance of payments deficit, straining the fixed exchange rate system tied to the French franc. Morocco's economy, heavily oriented towards exporting phosphates and agricultural products to France, was vulnerable to shifts in the French economy and global prices. Furthermore, the colonial monetary system was designed to serve metropolitan interests, channeling Moroccan savings to finance France's post-war reconstruction and limiting Morocco's independent fiscal and monetary policy tools.

This unstable and fragmented currency regime became a point of rising nationalist contention. Moroccan intellectuals and the growing independence movement, the Istiqlal Party, criticized the system as a symbol of economic subjugation and a tool for draining the country's resources. The call for a unified, truly national currency, managed by an independent central bank, became an important element of the broader political demand for sovereignty, which would be realized just a few years later with independence in 1956.

Series: 1951 Morocco circulation coins

1 Franc obverse
1 Franc reverse
1 Franc
1951
2 Francs obverse
2 Francs reverse
2 Francs
1951
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1951
10 Francs obverse
10 Francs reverse
10 Francs
1951-1952
🌱 Very Common