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obverse
reverse
Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.
Context
Year: 1831
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Currency:
(1795—1959)
Demonetization: 17 June 1868
Total mintage: 1,402,724
Material
Diameter: 23 mm
Weight: 5 g
Silver weight: 4.50 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard742
Numista: #2091
Value
Bullion value: $12.67

Obverse

Description:
Right, bare head.
Inscription:
LOUIS PHILIPPE I ROI DES FRANÇAIS.

TIOLIER
Translation:
LOUIS PHILIPPE I KING OF THE FRENCH.

TIOLIER
Script: Latin
Language: French

Reverse

Description:
A crown of two laurel branches joined at the base by a ribbon.
Inscription:
1

FRANC

A

1831
Script: Latin

Edge

Milled

Categories

Person> Monarch


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1831A202,325
1831B399,420
1831BB18,150
1831D127,130
1831H26,997
1831I21,423
1831K52,590
1831L2,400
1831M38,072
1831Q17,828
1831T43,960
1831W452,429

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
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1831
40 Francs obverse
40 Francs reverse
40 Francs
1831-1839
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1831
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1831
Rare