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obverse
reverse
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10 Centimes – Belgium

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: Marriage of the Duke of Brabant and the Archduchess Marie Henriette
Belgium
Context
Year: 1853
Issuer: Belgium Issuer flag
Ruler: Leopold I
Currency:
(1832—2001)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 104,000
Material
Diameter: 32 mm
Weight: 20 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
Numista: #272
Value
Exchange value: 0.10 BEF

Obverse

Description:
Léopold I faces left on a bust encircled by a French legend, with the engraver's initials below the neck and the date at the bottom.
Inscription:
LEOPOLD PREMIER ROI DES BELGES 1853
Translation:
Leopold the First King of the Belgians 1853
Script: Latin
Language: French
Engraver: Léopold Wiener

Reverse

Description:
Portraits of the Duke and Duchess of Brabant, with their names and wedding date encircling the rim and the designer's name below.
Inscription:
L.L. PH. M.V. DUC DE BRABANT M. H. A. DUCHESSE DE BRABANT 21-22 AOUT LEO. WIENER
Translation:
L.L. Ph. M.V. Duke of Brabant M. H. A. Duchess of Brabant 21-22 August Leo. Wiener
Script: Latin
Language: French
Engraver: Léopold Wiener

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Marriage
Person> Monarch

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint of Belgium

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1853104,000

Historical background

In 1853, Belgium's currency situation was defined by its adherence to the Latin Monetary Union (LMU) in all but name, several years before the formal treaty of 1865. Following its independence in 1830, Belgium had established a national monetary system based on the Belgian franc, which was pegged to the French franc at par (1:1). The system was bimetallic, meaning both gold and silver coins were legal tender at a fixed ratio (15.5:1), mirroring the French system established by Napoleon. This created a stable and predictable monetary environment crucial for a young, industrializing nation heavily dependent on trade with its neighbours, particularly France.

However, this bimetallic standard was under international strain. Fluctuations in the global market value of gold and silver versus the fixed mint ratio often led to the disappearance of the undervalued metal from circulation (Gresham's Law). In the early 1850s, new gold discoveries in California and Australia were beginning to depress the relative market value of gold, making silver coins more valuable as bullion. This created a persistent risk that silver coinage would be melted down or exported, leading to a shortage of everyday circulating currency for the Belgian public and commercial transactions.

Consequently, the Belgian government and the National Bank of Belgium, founded in 1850, were actively engaged in managing these practical challenges. Their focus was on ensuring sufficient coinage for the booming economy while maintaining the franc's stability and its crucial link to the French system. The period was thus one of operational management within a established bimetallic framework, but with growing awareness of its vulnerabilities, which would ultimately push Belgium to become a founding architect of the multinational Latin Monetary Union to formalize and defend the shared system.
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