Logo Title
obverse
reverse
apuking CC BY-SA
Context
Years: 1818–1828
Issuer: Netherlands Issuer flag
Ruler: William I
Currency:
(1817—2001)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 17,417,650
Material
Diameter: 18 mm
Weight: 1.69 g
Silver weight: 0.96 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 56.9% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard53
Numista: #22250
Value
Exchange value: 0.10 NLG
Bullion value: $2.75

Obverse

Description:
Dated monogram.
Inscription:
W

1826
Script: Latin

Reverse

Inscription:
10 C.
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
181848Proof
181925,030
1822113,142
1823B178,449
1825972,400
1825B1,750,018
18262,138,000
1826B1,429,543
18275,895,000
1827B1,711,486
18282,035,860
1828B1,168,674

Historical background

Following the Napoleonic Wars and the establishment of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1815, the nation faced a complex and fragmented monetary system. The country was a patchwork of old provincial coins, French francs from the occupation period, and various foreign currencies circulating from trade. This lack of uniformity hindered commerce, state finance, and economic recovery, creating an urgent need for a stable, national currency to unify the new kingdom under King William I.

In response, the Dutch government enacted the Monetary Law of 1816 (effective 1818), which established the Dutch guilder (gulden) as the sole national unit of currency. The system was deliberately bimetallic, based on both silver and gold. The guilder was formally defined as containing 9.613 grams of fine silver, while a ten-guilder piece was minted in gold. This move was a return to pre-Napoleonic Dutch monetary tradition, deliberately distancing the new state from the French franc system and asserting economic independence.

However, the 1818 reform contained a critical flaw: the official mint ratio between gold and silver was set slightly differently from the prevailing market ratios in neighboring countries, particularly Britain. This discrepancy inadvertently encouraged the export of silver coinage, as it was undervalued at the Dutch mint. Consequently, despite the law's intent, the Netherlands soon experienced a shortage of small silver currency in daily circulation, a problem that would persist and necessitate further adjustments in the decades to follow.

Series: 1818 Netherlands circulation coins

½ Cent obverse
½ Cent reverse
½ Cent
1818-1837
5 Cents obverse
5 Cents reverse
5 Cents
1818-1828
10 Cents obverse
10 Cents reverse
10 Cents
1818-1828
½ Gulden obverse
½ Gulden reverse
½ Gulden
1818-1830
1 Gulden obverse
1 Gulden reverse
1 Gulden
1818-1837
10 Gulden obverse
10 Gulden reverse
10 Gulden
1818-1840
🌱 Fairly Common