Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Auktionen Frühwald
Context
Years: 1858–1865
Country: Austria Country flag
Currency:
(1857—1892)
Demonetization: 31 December 1896
Total mintage: 11,636,194
Material
Diameter: 18 mm
Weight: 2 g
Silver weight: 1.00 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 50% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard2204
Numista: #24933
Value
Bullion value: $2.86

Obverse

Description:
Effigy of Franz Joseph I facing right. Rim inscription: "Franz Joseph I von Gottes Gnaden Kaiser von Österreich."
Inscription:
FRANZ JOSEPH I·V·G·G·KAISER V·OESTERREICH
Translation:
Franz Joseph I, by the Grace of God, Emperor of Austria
Script: Latin
Engraver: Johann Weiss

Reverse

Description:
Crown above value, year, and mintmark; SCHEIDE left, MÜNZE right. Small laurel and willow wreath tied with ribbon below.
Inscription:
SCHEIDE MÜNZE

10

1863

A
Translation:
Tenth

1863

A
Script: Latin
Language: German
Engraver: Johann Roth

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
MilanM

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1858A85,500
1858V1,354
1859V3,624,860
1859A
1859M933,450
1860V2,712,320
1861V962,310
1862V400,590
1863A631,250
1864A1,050,000
1864V36,280
1865V1,198,280

Historical background

By 1858, the Austrian Empire's currency situation was one of profound instability and transition, rooted in the financial strains of the 1848 revolutions and the costly Crimean War (1853-1856). The state, deeply in debt, had long relied on paper money (Bankozettel) not fully backed by silver, leading to chronic depreciation and a confusing multiplicity of circulating mediums, including concurrent paper gulden and silver gulden at fluctuating values. This period was defined by the painful aftermath of the 1857 currency treaty (Wiener Münzvertrag) with the German states, which aimed to create a common silver standard but instead exacerbated Austria's difficulties by exposing the severe over-issuance of its paper currency.

The core problem was the stark divergence between the paper gulden (Wiener Währung) and the silver gulden (Conventionsmünze), with paper trading at a significant discount. Public confidence in state-issued paper was low, and the National Bank (Österreichische Nationalbank), struggling to maintain convertibility, was forced to suspend silver payments for its notes in 1858. This effectively placed the empire on a forced paper standard, isolating it economically and hindering both domestic commerce and international trade due to unpredictable exchange rates and the high cost of hedging against currency risk.

Consequently, 1858 represents a low point and a turning point. The financial crisis underscored the urgent need for radical reform, setting the stage for Finance Minister Ignaz von Plener's austerity measures and the pivotal 1859 Münzpatent. This decree began the arduous, decades-long process of stabilizing the currency, which would eventually lead to the introduction of the gold-backed gulden (Gulden Österreichischer Währung) in 1892. Thus, the situation in 1858 was the chaotic prelude to the empire's long and difficult journey toward monetary modernization.

Series: 1858 Austrian Empire circulation coins

5⁄10 Kreuzer obverse
5⁄10 Kreuzer reverse
5⁄10 Kreuzer
1858-1866
1 Kreuzer obverse
1 Kreuzer reverse
1 Kreuzer
1858-1881
5 Kreuzers obverse
5 Kreuzers reverse
5 Kreuzers
1858-1864
10 Kreuzers obverse
10 Kreuzers reverse
10 Kreuzers
1858-1865
½ Krone obverse
½ Krone reverse
½ Krone
1858-1865
1 Krone obverse
1 Krone reverse
1 Krone
1858-1865
🌱 Fairly Common