Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1817–1830
Issuer: Netherlands Issuer flag
Ruler: William I
Currency:
(1817—2001)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 40,440,352
Material
Diameter: 20.6 mm
Weight: 4.23 g
Silver weight: 2.41 g
Thickness: 1.4 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 56.9% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard48
Numista: #29611
Value
Exchange value: 0.25 NLG
Bullion value: $6.84

Obverse

Description:
Dated monogram.
Inscription:
W

1825
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned arms splits value. Privy mark left, mint mark right.
Inscription:
25 C.
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1817
1818
181912,568
1819Proof
1822116,482
1823B734,400
1824B4,172,941
182510,311,100
1825B502,172
182612,289,384
1826B6,146,916
1827B2,021,836
1828B334,490
1829105,600
1829B1,255,682
1830B902,290
18301,534,491

Historical background

Following the Napoleonic Wars and the establishment of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1815, the nation faced a complex and fragmented currency situation. The economy was burdened by a chaotic mix of old Dutch guilders, French francs (from the period of French annexation), and various foreign coins, all circulating with unstable values. This monetary disarray hindered trade, state finance, and economic recovery, creating an urgent need for a uniform and stable national currency to solidify the new kingdom's economic foundation.

In response, King William I enacted the Monetary Law of 1817, which established the Dutch guilder (or gulden) as the sole legal tender. The new 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 law aimed to create confidence by pegging the currency to precious metals and centralizing coinage under state control, thereby driving out the myriad of foreign and obsolete coins from circulation.

However, the 1817 system soon encountered difficulties. The fixed legal ratio between gold and silver values did not align with shifting market prices, leading to the practical disappearance of one metal from circulation as it was hoarded or exported—a classic consequence of Gresham's Law. Thus, while the 1817 reform successfully created a unified national currency and ended the immediate post-war chaos, it planted the seeds for future monetary adjustments, as the Netherlands struggled with the inherent instabilities of a bimetallic standard in a changing international economy.

Series: 1817 Netherlands circulation coins

1 Cent obverse
1 Cent reverse
1 Cent
1817-1837
25 Cents obverse
25 Cents reverse
25 Cents
1817-1830
3 Gulden obverse
3 Gulden reverse
3 Gulden
1817-1832
1 Ducat obverse
1 Ducat reverse
1 Ducat
1817-1840
🌱 Fairly Common