Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1832–1843
Issuer: Greece Issuer flag
Ruler: Otto
Currency:
(1832—1944)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 4,592,300
Material
Diameter: 16.5 mm
Weight: 1 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard13
Numista: #23450

Obverse

Description:
Cross shield, crowned.
Inscription:
ΒΑΣΙΛΕΙΑ ΤΗΣ ΕΛΛΑΔΟΣ
Translation:
Kingdom of Hellas
Script: Greek
Language: Greek
Engraver: Konrad Lange

Reverse

Description:
Denomination and date encircled by wreath.
Inscription:
1 ΛΕΠΤΟΝ 1832
Translation:
A Lepton 1832.
Script: Greek
Language: Greek
Engraver: Konrad Lange

Edge

Milled

Categories

Symbol> Crown
Symbol> Wreath

Mints

NameMark
Munich

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
18322,200,000
1833
1834
1837159,500
1838269,000
1839149,500
1840702,700
1841370,400
1842121,200
1843620,000

Historical background

Following its War of Independence (1821-1829), the newly established Kingdom of Greece in 1832 inherited a monetary chaos. The Ottoman kuruş (piastre) remained in widespread circulation, but its value was unstable and it competed with a bewildering array of other currencies. These included French francs, Spanish dollars, Russian rubles, and various Italian coins, all brought by foreign fighters, traders, and lenders during the revolution. This fragmented system stifled trade, complicated taxation, and symbolized the lack of a unified national economy, posing a critical challenge to the fledgling state's stability and sovereignty.

The situation was formally addressed by the London Conference of 1832, where the Great Powers (Britain, France, and Russia) not only appointed Prince Otto of Bavaria as king but also dictated the terms of a new financial system. The treaty established the drachma as Greece's national currency, pegging it firmly to the French franc on the bimetallic standard (1 drachma = 1 franc). This meant the drachma's value was defined in terms of both silver and gold, aligning Greece with the Latin Monetary Union in practice. The move was a deliberate political and economic intervention, designed to integrate Greece into the Western European financial sphere and ensure stability for servicing the large foreign loan guaranteed by the Powers.

Despite this clear legal framework, the reality on the ground in 1832 and for years after was one of transition and scarcity. The government lacked the resources to immediately mint sufficient quantities of new coinage to replace the old mosaic of currencies. Consequently, the old foreign and Ottoman coins continued to circulate at negotiated values alongside the slowly introduced drachma. This period was marked by a chronic shortage of sound metallic money, which hindered commerce and state finances from the very birth of the modern Greek state, foreshadowing the profound economic challenges that would persist throughout the 19th century.

Series: 1832 Greece circulation coins

1 Lepton obverse
1 Lepton reverse
1 Lepton
1832-1843
2 Lepta obverse
2 Lepta reverse
2 Lepta
1832-1842
1 Drachma obverse
1 Drachma reverse
1 Drachma
1832-1847
Rare