Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1852–1857
Issuer: France Issuer flag
Currency:
(1795—1959)
Demonetization: 31 October 1934
Total mintage: 232,395,439
Material
Diameter: 30.2 mm
Weight: 10 g
Thickness: 1.5 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bronze
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard771
Numista: #320

Obverse

Description:
Left-facing portrait within beaded circle, surrounded by lettering, date below.
Inscription:
NAPOLEON III EMPEREUR

BARRE

1853
Translation:
NAPOLEON III EMPEROR
BARRE
1853
Script: Latin
Language: French

Reverse

Description:
Soaring eagle in profile.
Inscription:
EMPIRE FRANÇAIS

A

DIX CENTIMES
Translation:
FRENCH EMPIRE

A

TEN CENTIMES
Script: Latin
Language: French

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1852A642,898
1852E
1853A12,270,893
1853B3,718,711
1853BB4,630,090
1853D3,806,999
1853K
1853MA1,009,338
1853W3,240,204
1854MA8,206,090
1854W8,193,570
1854B7,975,216
1854BB8,490,492
1854D8,484,923
1854K7,163,120
1854A13,626,631
1855A9,091,999
1855B7,803,578
1855K8,046,364
1855MA7,975,490
1855W6,450,610
1855BB7,883,903
1855D8,332,994
1856B11,493,357
1856BB8,396,005
1856A19,288,522
1856K8,670,337
1856MA10,933,169
1856W11,258,673
1856D5,067,712
1857A2,902,500
1857B1,375,638
1857BB1,070,080
1857K1,129,359
1857MA2,003,732
1857W1,762,242

Historical background

In 1852, France was under the authoritarian rule of Napoleon III, who had recently re-established the Empire. The nation's currency system was a direct legacy of his uncle, Napoleon Bonaparte, who had instituted the franc germinal in 1803. This system was bimetallic, meaning both gold and silver coins were legal tender at a fixed ratio of 15.5 to 1 (silver to gold). The franc was a stable and internationally respected currency, defined by a specific weight of precious metal, which facilitated trade and investment during a period of rapid industrialization.

However, this bimetallic standard was becoming increasingly strained by global economic shifts. Major discoveries of gold in California (1848) and Australia (1851) were beginning to flood the market, subtly altering the market value ratio between gold and silver compared to the fixed legal ratio. This created the risk of Gresham's Law, where "bad money drives out good"—if the fixed ratio undervalued one metal at the mint, people would hoard that metal and only circulate the other. While the full effects were not yet catastrophic, the system was losing its automatic equilibrium.

Consequently, France, along with other Latin Monetary Union nations it would soon help found (1865), was transitioning towards a gold standard in practice. Silver coins remained in circulation for smaller transactions, but large commercial and state operations increasingly functioned on a gold basis. This period thus represents the calm before a monetary storm, with the stable franc germinal still officially in place but under growing pressure from new global bullion supplies that would eventually force a formal re-evaluation of the international monetary order.

Series: 1852 France circulation coins

10 Centimes obverse
10 Centimes reverse
10 Centimes
1852-1857
1 Franc obverse
1 Franc reverse
1 Franc
1852
5 Francs obverse
5 Francs reverse
5 Francs
1852
20 Francs obverse
20 Francs reverse
20 Francs
1852
50 Centimes obverse
50 Centimes reverse
50 Centimes
1852
🌱 Very Common